Performance Analysis of Existing ITS Technologies: Evaluation and Coexistence

Sensors (Basel). 2022 Dec 7;22(24):9570. doi: 10.3390/s22249570.

Abstract

The performance of vehicular communication technologies changes dynamically according to the application requirements considering data rate, communication ranges, latency, etc. These applications are evolving rapidly and should enhance intelligent transport systems (ITS) such as road safety and automated driving. However, to reach the required quality, these applications need many radio resources to carry the potential traffic load resulting from the environmental perception and data exchanged between the different entities. Therefore, an assessment of vehicular communication technologies' reliability and resilience under these conditions is required to address the multiple challenges of the ITS services. The paper's main contribution is to propose a comprehensive analysis model able to evaluate and compare the performances of ITS technologies according to different constraints related to environment-changing situations. This analysis examines the channel occupancy and provides simulation results which allow the identification of the suitable configurations and the most appropriate technology for a given use case. We also propose a coexistence solution between these technologies based on density-sharing according to the use case requirements and the availability of the technology. Finally, we present the challenge of adaptive configuration in vehicular networks, which helps to provide the optimal structure through road profiles and environment variability (infrastructure, data, etc.). Results show different trade offs and limitations between the considered ITS technologies, which are essential to understand their behaviour in a realistic environment.

Keywords: ITS technologies; adaptive-configuration; co-existence; performance evaluation; vehicular networks.

MeSH terms

  • Automobile Driving*
  • Communication
  • Computer Simulation
  • Reproducibility of Results

Grants and funding

This research received no external funding.