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Title: VANET technology


1
Chapter 7 Modeling of Intermittent Connectivity
in Opportunistic Networks The Case of Vehicular
Ad hoc Networks
BOOK ON ROUTING IN OPPORTUNISTIC NETWORKS
  • 1Anna Maria Vegni, 2Claudia Campolo, 2Antonella
    Molinaro, and 3Thomas D.C. Little

1University of Roma Tre 2University Mediteranneaof Reggio Calabria 3Boston University
2
Objectives of the Chapter
  • Analyze connectivity issues in Vehicular Ad hoc
    NETworks
  • Provide an overview of vehicular connectivity
    models in the literature
  • Discuss hybrid and opportunistic communication
    paradigms designed to improve connectivity in
    vehicular environments

3
Outline
  • Opportunistic Networks
  • The Case of Vehicular Ad hoc Networks
  • VANETs an Introduction
  • Connectivity in VANETs
  • Modeling Connectivity
  • Improving Connectivity
  • Conclusions and Discussions

4
Opportunistic Networks
  • Definition Opportunistic networks are one of the
    most interesting evolutions of Mobile Ad-hoc
    NETworks (MANETs)
  • The assumption of a complete path between the
    source and the destination is relaxed
  • Mobile nodes are enabled to communicate with each
    other even if a route connecting them may not
    exist or may break frequently

5
Opportunistic Networks Techniques
  • Opportunistic networking techniques allow mobile
    nodes to exchange messages by taking advantage of
    mobility and leveraging the store-carry-and-forwar
    d approach
  • A message can be stored in a node and forwarded
    over a wireless link as soon as a connection
    opportunity arises with a neighbour node
  • Opportunistic networks are then considered as a
    special kind of Delay Tolerant Network (DTN) 3,
    providing connectivity despite long link delays
    or frequent link breaks

6
Opportunistic Networks Types
  • Opportunistic networks include
  • Mobile sensor networks 5
  • Packet-switched networks 6
  • Vehicular Ad hoc NETworks (VANETs) 7

7
VANETs
  • Definition
  • A VANET (Vehicular Ad hoc NETwork) is a special
    kind of MANET in which packets are exchanged
    between mobile nodes (vehicles) traveling on
    constrained paths

8
VANETs
  • Like MANETs
  • They self-organize over an evolving topology
  • They may rely on multi-hop communications
  • They can work without the support of a fixed
    infrastructure
  • Unlike MANETs
  • They have been conceived for a different set of
    applications
  • They move at higher speeds (0-40 m/s)
  • They do not have battery and storage constraints

9
VANETs
  • Communication modes
  • Vehicle-to-Vehicle (V2V) among vehicles
  • Vehicle-to-Infrastructure (V2I), between vehicles
    and Road-Side Units (RSUs)
  • Vehicle-to-X (V2X), mixed V2V-V2I approach

V2V
RSU
V2I
V2I
V2V
RSU
10
VANETs
  • Applications
  • Active Road-Safety Applications
  • To avoid the risk of car accidents e.g.,
    cooperative collision warning, pre-crash sensing,
    lane change, traffic violation warning
  • Traffic efficiency and management applications
  • To optimize flows of vehicles e.g., enhanced
    route guidance/navigation, traffic light optimal
    scheduling, lane merging assistance
  • Comfort and Infotainment applications
  • To provide the driver with information support
    and entertainment e.g., point of interest
    notification, media downloading, map download and
    update, parking access, media streaming, voice
    over IP, multiplayer gaming, web browsing, social
    networking

11
VANETs
  • VANETs applications exhibit very heterogeneous
    requirements
  • Safety applications require reliable,
    low-latency, and efficient message dissemination
  • Non-safety applications have very different
    communication requirements, from no special
    real-time requirements of traveler information
    support applications, to guaranteed
    Quality-of-Service needs of multimedia and
    interactive entertainment applications

12
VANETs
  • Enabling communication technologies
  • Wi-MAX
  • Long Term Evolution (LTE)
  • IEEE 802.11
  • IEEE 802.11p

Centralized V2I/I2V communications
Ad hoc V2V and centralized V2I/I2V communications
13
Connectivity in VANETs
  • There are three primary models for
    interconnecting vehicles based on
  • Network infrastructure
  • Inter-vehicle communications
  • Hybrid configuration

14
Connectivity in VANETs
  • Network infrastructure
  • Vehicles connect to a centralized server or a
    backbone network such as the Internet, through
    the road-side infrastructure, e.g., cellular base
    stations, IEEE 802.11 Access Points, IEEE 802.11p
    RSUs

15
Connectivity in VANETs
  • Inter-vehicle communications
  • Use of direct ad-hoc connectivity among vehicles
    via multihop for applications requiring
    long-range communications (e.g., traffic
    monitoring), as well as short-range
    communications (e.g., lane merging)

16
Connectivity in VANETs
  • Hybrid configuration
  • Use of a combination of V2V and V2I. Vehicles in
    range directly connect to the road-side
    infrastructure, while exploit multi-hop
    connectivity otherwise

17
Connectivity in VANETs
  • Vehicles connectivity is determined by a
    combination of several factors, like
  • Space and time dynamics of moving vehicles (i.e.,
    vehicle density and speed)
  • Density of RSUs
  • Radio communication range

RSU
Vehicle density/speed
Connectivity
Communication range
Time of day
  • Vehicular scenario
  • Urban
  • Highway

Market penetration
18
Modeling V2V Connectivity in VANETs
  • Most of existing literature in VANET focuses on
    modeling the V2V connectivity probability
  • Common assumption a vehicular network is
    partitioned into a number of clusters
  • Vehicles within a partition communicate either
    directly or through multiple hops, but no
    direct connection exists among partitions

19
Modeling V2V Connectivity in VANETs
  • In a fragmented vehicular ad hoc network, under
    the DTN assumption and exponentially distributed
    inter-vehicle distances, the probability that two
    consecutive vehicles are disconnected is 28
  • where X m is the inter-vehicle distance, ?
    veh/m is the distribution parameter for
    inter-vehicle distances and R m is the radio
    range

20
Modeling V2V Connectivity in VANETs
  • Accurate predictions of the network connectivity
    can be made using percolation theory, describing
    the behavior of connected clusters in a random
    graph
  • In the stationary regime, assuming the spatial
    vehicles distribution as a Poisson process, the
    upper bound on the average fraction of vehicles
    that are connected to no other vehicles is 14
  • The vehicular network is at a state that the rate
    of vehicles entering the network is the same as
    the rate of vehicle leaving it

21
Modeling V2V Connectivity in VANETs
  • The platoon size (i.e., the number of vehicles in
    each connected cluster), and the connectivity
    distance (i.e., the length of a connected path
    from any vehicle) are two metrics used to model
    V2V connectivity in VANETs 22
  • When the traffics speed increases, the
    connectivity metrics decrease
  • If the variance of the speeds distribution is
    increased, then, provided that the average speed
    remains fixed, the connectivity is improved

22
Modeling V2I Connectivity in VANETs
  • More challenging w.r.t. V2V case
  • As vehicles move, connectivity is both fleeting,
    usually lasting only a few seconds at urban
    speeds, and intermittent, with gaps between a
    connection and the subsequent one
  • Different vehicle placement conditions influence
    the overall connectivity, while RSUs do not
    significantly improve connectivity in all
    scenarios
  • E.g., RSUs at intersections do not reduce the
    proportion of isolated vehicles, which are more
    likely to be in the middle of the road 14

23
Modeling V2I Connectivity in VANETs
  • The notion of intermittent coverage for mobile
    users provides the worst-case guarantees on the
    interconnection gap, while using significantly
    fewer RSUs
  • The interconnection gap is defined as the maximum
    distance, or expected travel time, between two
    consecutive vehicle-RSU contacts.
  • Such a metric is chosen because the delay due to
    mobility and disconnection affects messages
    delivery more than channel congestion 25

24
Modeling V2V-V2I Connectivity
  • List of the main common assumptions in
    connectivity models for VANET

Assumption Assumption Type
Vehicle distribution Poisson
Topology 1D w/o traffic lights / intersections
Underlying model Connectivity graph
Propagation model Unit disk model
RSUs distribution Uniform
25
Improving Connectivity in VANETs
  • Opportunistic approaches for connectivity support
    in VANETs
  • Opportunistic contacts, both among vehicles and
    from vehicles to available RSUs, can be used to
    instantiate and sustain both safety and
    non-safety applications
  • Opportunistic forwarding is the main technique
    adopted in DTN 55
  • In VANETs, bridging technique links the
    partitioning that exists between clusters
    traveling in the same direction of the roadway

26
Improving Connectivity in VANETs
  • The use of a vehicular grid together with an
    opportunistic infrastructure placed on the roads
    guarantees seamless connectivity in dynamic
    vehicular scenarios 59-61
  • Hybrid communication paradigms for vehicular
    networking are used to limit intermittent
    connectivity
  • Vehicle-to-X (V2X) works in heterogeneous
    scenarios, where overlapping wireless networks
    partially cover the vehicular grid. It relies on
    the concept of multi-hop communication path

27
Improving Connectivity in VANETs
  • In V2X approach, there is the vehicular
    partitioning with different connectivity phases
  • Phase 1 (No connectivity)
  • A vehicle is traveling alone in the vehicular
    grid (totally-disconnected traffic scenario). The
    vehicles are completely disconnected
  • Phase 2 (Short-range connectivity)
  • A vehicle is traveling in the vehicular grid and
    forming a cluster with other vehicles. Only V2V
    connectivity is available
  • Phase 3 (Long-range connectivity)
  • A vehicle is traveling in the vehicular grid with
    available neighboring RSUs. Only V2I connectivity
    is assumed to be available

28
Improving Connectivity in VANETs
  • The probability that a vehicle lays in one of the
    three phases is expressed as the probability that
    a vehicle is
  • Not connected (Phase 1)
  • Connected with neighbours (Phase 2)
  • Connected with RSUs (Phase 3)

29
Improving Connectivity in VANETs
  • (a)
    (b)
  • Probability of connected vehicles (a) vs. the
    vehicle traffic density (Phases 13), and (b) vs.
    the vehicle traffic density and the connectivity
    range (Phase 1).

30
Improving Connectivity in VANETs
  • Satellite connectivity is used in VANETs for
    outdoor navigation and positioning services
  • As an opportunistic link, it is intended to
    augment short and medium-range communications to
    bridge isolated vehicles or clusters of vehicles,
    when no other mechanism is available

31
Conclusions and Discussions
  • Connectivity issues in VANETs have been
    investigated
  • Road topology, traffic density, vehicle speed,
    market penetration of the VANET technology and
    transmission range strongly affect the network
    connectivity behavior

32
Conclusions and Discussions
  • Analytical models deriving connectivity
    performance in VANETs have been discussed
  • They differ into the underlying assumptions and
    the considered connectivity metrics
  • Solutions improving connectivity in VANETs have
    been reviewed
  • Exploiting infrastructure nodes, relay-based
    techniques and even satellite communications to
    bridge isolated vehicles when no other mechanism
    is available

33
Conclusions and Discussions
  • Analytical models play an important role in
    performance evaluation of VANETs and need to be
    significantly improved in terms of accurateness
    and realism
  • Further efforts are required to design solutions
    enabling V2V and V2I connectivity in different
    network conditions to sustain both safety and
    non-safety applications

34
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