Title: Dedicated Short-Range Communications
1Dedicated Short-Range Communications
2Abstract
- In the next decade it is expected that vehicles
would become part of the Intelligent
Transportation System. The MAC and physical
layers of this system would be supported by IEEE
802.11p Wireless Access in Vehicular Environments
(WAVE) standard. In what follows we give an
introduction to IEEE 802.11p, showing its PHY and
MAC layers as well as research issues connected
to each.
3Outline
- Motivation
- Issues with Vehicle Communications
- Overview
- Terminology
- Physical Layer
- MAC Layer
4Terminology
- OBE(U) On-board equipment (unit)
- RSE(U) Road side equipment (unit)
- VII Vehicle Infrastructure Integration
- ITS Intelligent Transportation Services
- VANET Vehicular Ad Hoc Network
- WAVE Wireless Access in Vehicular Environments
- AC Access Category
- CW Contention Window
5Role of DSRC
From Intelligent Transportation System, High
Level Architecture Description, 16
6Motivation
- Relatively short-range, high-bandwidth, and
low latency communications technology for
traffic safety. - FCC has allocated 75 MHz of bandwidth around 5.9
GHz for VII. - VII takes two forms
- vehicle-to-vehicle (V2V)
- vehicle-to-roadside communications (V2R) 1
7Motivation
- Supporting vehicular wireless communications
capabilities within a 1000 m range at highway
speeds 3 - Standardization efforts include IEEE 802.11p
- IEEE 802.11p also known as Wireless Access in
Vehicular Environment (WAVE) - Relies on location and timing information from
GPS - Vehicles will be equipped with OBE to collect
sensor information and relay to neighboring
vehicles 1.
8Applications
- Applications include
- Coordinated traffic control
- Electronic toll collection
- Hazard warnings,
- Road-level weather advisories
- Different types of safety warnings 1.
9Issues with Vehicle Communications
- Privacy issues
- Should not divulge identity of vehicle reporting
incident - Reliability
- Vehicles are in range for limited period
- Timely reporting
- Note Energy conservation not issue
- OBE has access to power from car 2
10Physical Layer
- Variant of IEEE 802.11a PHY
- In North America standard provides seven channels
in the 5.9 GHz licensed band 4 - Each channel designated for different
applications 3 - Channels are 10 MHz wide, with 5 MHz margin at
lower end of band 4 - Central channel is control channel 4
- Other channels are service channels 4
- Has six (6) service channels and one control
channel - Two service channels designated for special
safety critical applications 18
11Physical Layer
- Variant of IEEE 802.11a PHY 4
- Uses 64 subcarrier OFDM, 52 subcarriers used for
actual transmission - 48 data subcarriers and 4 pilot subcarriers
- Pilot signals used to get frequency offset and
compute phase noise - Training symbols in each packet preamble
- Used for signal detection, coarse frequency
offset estimation, time synchronization and
channel estimation - Guard time associated with each OFDM symbol to
combat ISI. - Data bits are coded and interleaved to combat
fading.
12Physical Layer
- Variant of IEEE 802.11a PHY 4
- Each vehicle broadcasts status 10 times per
second. - Lower priority communication is carried out on
service channels after negotiation on control
channel. - Two adjacent service channels may be used
together as a single 20 MHz channel - Frequency bandwidth is 10 MHz to increase
tolerance to multipath propagation effects - Results in reduced Doppler effects
- Reduces ISI caused by multipath propagation
- Data rate for IEEE 802.11p is half that of IEEE
802.11a
13Physical Layer
- Channels available for IEEE 802.11p 8
- Negotiation for service channels is done on
control channel
From S. Eichler, Performance Evaluation of the
IEEE 802.11p WAVE Communication Standard 8
14MAC Layer
- Uses prioritized channel access developed for
IEEE 802.11e 4 - No frame exchange prior to actual data
transmission - Reduces communication overhead
- Basic Service Set (BSS) is initiated by provide
station transmitting service announcement frame
regularly - No restrictions on transmission intervals
- No authentication or frame exchange needed to
join BSS - Each station contains four queues representing
four different types of traffic - Each queue contends independently for medium
access
15MAC Layer
- Uses prioritized channel access developed for
IEEE 802.11e 4 - Each station maps eight user priorities (UP) into
four access categories (AC) - Each AC is modeled as a separate queue contending
independently for medium 17 - Each AC has different MAC layer parameters 17
16MAC Layer
- Uses prioritized channel access developed for
IEEE 802.11e 4 - EDCA parameters for IEEE 802.11p 8
- Used for access to control channel
- aCWmin 15
- aCWmax 1023
AC CWmin CWmax AIFSN tw
0 aCWmin aCWmax 9 264 µs
1 (aCWmin 1)/2 -1 aCWmin 6 152 µs
2 (aCWmin 1)/4 -1 (aCWmin 1)/2 -1 3 72 µs
3 (aCWmin 1)/4 -1 (aCWmin 1)/2 -1 2 56 µs
From S. Eichler, Performance Evaluation of the
IEEE 802.11p WAVE Communication Standard 8
17MAC Layer
- How to communicate
- Stations use Enhanced Distributed Contention
Access (EDCA) scheme. - AIFSAC AIFSNACaSlotTime SIFS
- If frame arrives in an empty AC queue and medium
has been idle for more than AIFSAC aSlotTime
17 - Packet is transmitted immediately
- If frame arrives when medium is busy (6 and
17) - Wait until medium idle
- Defer for AIFSAC aSlotTime
- Pick random CW size and countdown to zero 6
- Additional period is given by CW size for this
traffic category - Transmit
18MAC Layer
- How to communicate
- If a transmission fails, the station uses the
binary exponential back-off (BEB) scheme 8 - BEB equation CW 2(CW1) 1
- BEB continues until
- CW CWmax or
- maximum number of retries is achieved
- Station cannot gain access to SCH and CCH for
more than 100 ms 8
19MAC Layer
- Some IFS Relationships Fig. 9-3 in 6
From IEEE Std. 802.11-2007, Part 11 Wireless LAN
Medium Access Control (MAC) and Physical Layer
(PHY) Specifications, 6
20Implementation Issues
- How is routing done?
- Traditional MANET routing protocols cannot be
used in VANET - MANET protocols have an explicit
route-establishment phase 3 - Cannot use traditional routing techniques since
message recipients are unknown beforehand 3.
21Implementation Issues
- How is routing done?
- Direction-aware broadcast forwarding 3
- Vehicle forwards emergency situation message to
all cars behind it - Naïve broadcast 3
- Vehicle immediately broadcasts message on
emergency situation - Intelligent broadcast with Implicit
Acknowledgement 3 - Vehicle broadcasts emergency situation message to
its neighbors - If vehicle eventually receives the same message,
it ceases broadcast - Simulations show that scheme shows good
performance.
22Implementation Issues
- Improving reliability (from 7)
- Lower layers of DSRC are variant of IEEE 802.11a
- Manages medium poorly for broadcasts.
- Failed broadcasts are not retransmitted
- Contention window size is not adjusted for failed
broadcasts - Suggest using an adaptive scheme
- If reception rate exceeds threshold contention
window is reduced.
23Implementation Issues
- Providing security 19
- Need to provide
- Anonymity
- Can be provided by using
- Anonymous certificates
- Random MACs
- Changing IP addresses when the OBU moves to new
RSU - Authentication
- Ensure that fake messages cannot be inserted into
the system - Prevent eavesdropping
- Prevent competitors from eavesdropping on
commercial vehicle operations
24Implementation Issues
- Deployment timeline (from 1)
- Proof of concept testing in 2007
- Decision on deployment by vehicle manufacturers
and Department of Transportation by late 2008. - Potential introduction in vehicles in 201x
- IEEE 802.11 completion by 12/31/08 15
25References
- J. McNew et al., Safe in Traffic, GPS World,
vol. 17, no. 10, pp. 41-48, Oct. 2006. - M. Conti and S. Giordano, Multihop Ad Hoc
Networking The Reality, IEEE Communications
Magazine, vol. 45, no. 4, pp. 88-95, April 2007. - S. Biswas et al., Vehicle-to-vehicle Wireless
Communication Protocols for Enhancing Highway
Traffic Safety, IEEE Communications Magazine,
vol. 44, no. 1, pp. 74-82, Jan. 2006. - L. Stibor et al., Neighborhood Evaluation of
Vehicular Ad-hoc Network Using IEEE 802.11p, in
Proc. 13th European Wireless Conf., Paris,
France, 2007 - S. K. Shanmugam and H. Leung, A Novel M-ary
Chaotic Spread Spectrum Communication Scheme for
DSRC System in ITS, in Proc. 60th IEEE Vehicular
Technology Conference, Fall 2004, Los Angeles,
CA, USA, vol. 2, pp. 803-807. - IEEE Std. 802.11-2007, Part 11 Wireless LAN
Medium Access Control (MAC) and Physical Layer
(PHY) Specifications, IEEE, 2007. - N. Balon and J. Guo, Increasing broadcast
reliability in vehicular ad hoc networks, in
Proc. 3rd Intl Workshop Vehicular Ad Hoc
Networks, 2006, Los Angeles, CA, USA, pp.
104-105. - S. Eichler, Performance Evaluation of the IEEE
802.11p WAVE Communication Standard, in Proc.
IEEE 66th Vehicular Technology Conference,
(VTC-2007 Fall), Baltimore, MD, USA, pp.
2199-2203. - D. Jiang et al. Design of 5.9 GHz DSRC-based
Vehicular Safety Communication, IEEE Wireless
Communications, see also IEEE Personal
Communications, vol. 13, no. 5, pp. 36-43, Oct.
2006. - M. Torrent-Moreno, D. Jiang, and H. Hartenstein,
Broadcast reception rates and effects of
priority access in 802.11-based vehicular ad-hoc
networks, in Proc. 1st ACM Intl Workshop on
Vehicular Ad Hoc Networks, 2004, Philadelphia,
PA, USA, pp. 10-18.
26References
- Q. Xu et al., Layer-2 protocol design for
vehicle safety communications in dedicated short
range communications spectrum, in Proc. 7th
Intl IEEE Conf. Intelligent Transportation
Systems, 2004, pp. 1092-1097. - F. Yu and S. Biswas, Self-Configuring TDMA
Protocols for Enhancing Vehicle Safety With DSRC
Based Vehicle-to-Vehicle Communications, IEEE
Journal on Selected Areas in Communications, vol.
25, no. 8, pp. 1526-1537, Oct. 2007. - J. Zhu and S. Roy, MAC for Dedicated Short Range
Communications in Intelligent Transport System,
IEEE Communications Magazine, vol. 41, no. 12,
pp. 60-67, Dec. 2003. - M. D. Dikaiakos et al., Location-Aware Services
over Vehicular Ad-Hoc Networks using Car-to-Car
Communication, IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in
Communications, vol. 25, no. 8, pp. 1590-1602,
Oct. 2007. - IEEE 802.11 Official Timelines, Mar. 2008,
http//grouper.ieee.org/groups/802/11/Reports/802.
11_Timelines.htm - Intelligent Transportation System, High Level
Architecture Description, Feb. 2008http//www.its
.dot.gov/arch/arch_longdesc.htm - Q. Ni, L. Romdhani, and T. Turletti, A Survey of
QoS Enhancements for IEEE 802.11 Wireless LAN,
Journal of Wireless Communications and Mobile
Computing, vol. 4, no. 5, pp. 547-566, Aug. 2004. - M. Weigle, Standards WAVE/ DSRC/ 802.11p,
class notes CS 795/895, Old Dominion University,
Spring 2008. - W. Whyte, Safe at Any Speed Dedicated Short
Range Communications (DSRC) and On-road Safety
and Security, presented at RSA Conference 2005.
27 28Physical Layer
- Research Issues
- Using a chaotic spread spectrum modulation scheme
5 - Baseband symbols split into in-phase and
quadrature phase components and each is modulated
with chaotic parameter modulation. - Proposed system achieves the same performance as
a conventional M-ary QAM system with a relatively
low complexity receiver.
29MAC Layer
- Research issues (from 8)
- Recall WAVE has control channel and six service
channels - Each station would use both control channel and
service channel for no more than 100 ms. - Contention mechanism in WAVE uses specific
parameters - Simulation results show that number of received
messages for all AC decreases linearly due to
more collisions on channel.
30MAC Layer
- Research issues (from 8)
- Suggests using mechanism to reduce number of high
priority messages - Will result in slightly shorter message queues
- Suggest using different EDCA parameters to
minimize effects of high collision probability
31MAC Layer
- Research issues (from 9)
- Congestion control mechanism necessary in DSRC.
- Vehicles could regulate message generation rates
and transmission powers according to context. - Propose using Piggybacked Acknowledgement
protocol for performance feedback. - Propose ECHO protocol to proactively forward
other nodes messages
32MAC Layer
- Research issues (from 10)
- Assume VANETs will operate in saturated state
- Need to determine network parameters to reduce
probability of collision - Propose priority access scheme
- Simulation results show that decreasing AIFS and
CW size results in higher packet reception
probability - AIFS has larger effect on probability
33MAC Layer
- Research issues (from 11)
- Develop MAC protocol that can meet latency and
reliability requirements for safety messages,
while making economical use of the control
channel. - Propose new MAC protocols that have lower
probability of reception failure and occupy the
channel less than IEEE 802.11
34MAC Layer
- Research issues (from 12)
- Introduces Vehicular Self-Organizing MAC
(VeSOMAC) - TDMA protocol which copes with vehicular topology
changes - Simulations show that VeSOMAC has smaller packet
latency than IEEE 802.11 - Results in fewer vehicles colliding in a VANET
35MAC Layer
- Research issues (from 13)
- Presents state of art on IEEE 802.11, and how
that applies to VANETs. - State that most current research on multi-hop
networks assumes slowly-changing topology. - Not necessarily case for VANETs.
- MAC design for DSRC complicated by shortened
connection time and frequent topology changes - Must support higher data rates due to shorter
connection time.
36Application Layer
- Research issues (from 14)
- Introduces Vehicular Information Transfer
Protocol (VITP) - VITP is stateless and analogous to HTTP
- VITP architecture consists of
- VITP peers
- Location encoding scheme and
- Additional protocol features
- VITP performance depends on return condition for
VITP requests