The Role of Bidirectional VLC Systems in Low-Latency 6G Vehicular Networks and Comparison with IEEE802.11p and LTE/5G C-V2X
<p>(<b>a</b>) Sketch of the bidirectional communication. The head-light (HL, TX1/RX2) and the rear light (RL, TX2/RX1) are placed facing each other at the same height. The TX1/RX2 sends a continuous data stream, the TX2/RX1 back replies only if the packet is correctly received. At the end, the TX1/RX2 fulfils a byte-wise comparison. (<b>b</b>) Block diagram of the experiment: the Forward message (in TX1/RX2 block) is fed into the head-light thanks a current modulator, which modulates the light with a Manchester encoding. The light travels through the optical channel and it is collected by a photoreceiver (in TX2/RX1 block). The collected analog signal is sent to a comparator/digitizer board, and the Arduino based microcontroller performs a byte-wise comparison between a pre-stored message and the resulting digital signal. If no wrong bytes are detected in a packet, the microcontroller counts it and generates a backward message, which is fed into the rear-light. Analogously to the forward message, the backward message travels back from the TX2/RX1 to the TX1/RX2, and it is compared with the stored reference message.</p> "> Figure 2
<p>The three different time scales in each picture represent: the TX1, sending a continuous data stream of 10<math display="inline"><semantics> <msup> <mrow/> <mn>4</mn> </msup> </semantics></math> packets separated by an inter-packet delay (IPD) slightly greater then the packet time (PT) along the x direction; the TX2, after performing an active decoding and, if the packet is correct, back replies (−x direction) then, the final stage counts the correct received packets after a round trip. (<b>a</b>) If in all the round trip no packet is lost, the minimum latency is <span class="html-italic">L</span><math display="inline"><semantics> <msub> <mrow/> <mn>0</mn> </msub> </semantics></math>. The loss of the packet could happen both in the first path (<b>b</b>), and in the second path (<b>c</b>), in each case, the latency of the bidirectional link grows as <math display="inline"><semantics> <mrow> <msub> <mi>L</mi> <mi>N</mi> </msub> <mo>=</mo> <msub> <mi>L</mi> <mn>0</mn> </msub> <mo>+</mo> <msub> <mi>N</mi> <mrow> <mi>L</mi> <mi>o</mi> <mi>s</mi> <mi>t</mi> </mrow> </msub> <mrow> <mo>(</mo> <mi>I</mi> <mi>P</mi> <mi>D</mi> <mo>+</mo> <mi>P</mi> <mi>T</mi> <mo>)</mo> </mrow> </mrow> </semantics></math>, where <span class="html-italic">N</span><math display="inline"><semantics> <msub> <mrow/> <mrow> <mi>L</mi> <mi>o</mi> <mi>s</mi> <mi>t</mi> </mrow> </msub> </semantics></math> is the number of consecutive lost packets in the final stage.</p> "> Figure 3
<p>(<b>a</b>) PER of the VLC system with a baud rate of 57 kBaud. An error-free communication can be established for distances up to 9 m. To each symbol is associated an error bar, representing the standard deviation of the error. Horizontal and vertical error bars are smaller than the symbol mark. (<b>b</b>) Occurrences of the number of consecutively lost packets (errors cluster size) for different PER values. (<b>c</b>) SAL (ms) as a function of the success probability for different PER values.</p> "> Figure 4
<p>Minimum safe distance <math display="inline"><semantics> <mrow> <mi>s</mi> <mi>d</mi> </mrow> </semantics></math> in platooning use case for different velocity of the two vehicles.</p> "> Figure 5
<p>Latency of a VLC bidirectional connection as a function of the speed of the first vehicle (<math display="inline"><semantics> <msub> <mi mathvariant="sans-serif">v</mi> <mn>1</mn> </msub> </semantics></math> in the <span class="html-italic">x</span>-axis) and the speed difference between vehicles (<math display="inline"><semantics> <mrow> <msub> <mi mathvariant="sans-serif">v</mi> <mn>2</mn> </msub> <mo>−</mo> <msub> <mi mathvariant="sans-serif">v</mi> <mn>1</mn> </msub> </mrow> </semantics></math> in the <span class="html-italic">y</span>-axis). The red zone shows the speeds configuration so that a VLC connection cannot be established between the two vehicles. In the red zone, the latency is not defined since in that zone the two vehicles cannot support a stable connection.</p> ">
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. The Role of VLC in 6G
1.2. Our Contribution
- First characterization of latency in a bidirectional VLC-based communication system for ITS application;
- Experimental measurements campaign have been carried out in a real urban scenario with real head- and tail- motorbike LED-based lamps;
- The results demonstrate that our low-cost system guarantees good latency performance, compared with the URLL 5G communication threshold [7];
- The simulation results using the experiments-based mobility model can highlight the benefit of VLC systems for future vehicular applications, as the communication interface currently planned by 6G.
2. Hardware Overview and Experimental Setup
3. Experimental Results
4. Mobility Model, Performance Comparison and Discussion
- Phase 1.
- The first vehicle starts to brake and its velocity decreases following the equation of uniformly decelerated motion. In the meanwhile, the second vehicle continues to move following the equation of linear motion with constant speed. This step lasts until the automated braking system engages.
- Phase 2.
- After the latency time of the communication system, the automated braking system engages and the second vehicle starts to brake following the equation of uniformly decelerated motion. The first vehicle continues to brake as in the previous point.
- 50 ms for IEEE802.11p standard;
- 40 ms in C-V2X based on LTE network;
- 10 ms in C-V2X based on 5G network.
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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PER | Probability to Achieve a SAL Value | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
≤ 2.5 ms | ≤ 5.6 ms | ≤ 8.8 ms | ≤ 11.9 ms | ≤ 15.1 ms | |
> 99.95% | |||||
99.9% | > 99.95% | ||||
99% | 99.91% | ||||
86% | 98.2% | 99.7% | 99.91% | > 99.95% |
Vehicles Speed | Safety Distance [m] for Platooning Scenario | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
VLC | 5G | LTE | IEEE 802.11p | Human Reaction Only | |
40 km/h | 0.03 | 0.11 | 0.44 | 0.55 | 8.78 |
60 km/h | 0.04 | 0.17 | 0.66 | 0.82 | 16.40 |
80 km/h | 0.06 | 0.22 | 0.88 | 1.10 | 24.01 |
100 km/h | 0.07 | 0.28 | 1.10 | 1.38 | 31.62 |
120 km/h | 0.08 | 0.33 | 1.33 | 1.66 | 39.23 |
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Caputo, S.; Mucchi, L.; Umair, M.A.; Meucci, M.; Seminara, M.; Catani, J. The Role of Bidirectional VLC Systems in Low-Latency 6G Vehicular Networks and Comparison with IEEE802.11p and LTE/5G C-V2X. Sensors 2022, 22, 8618. https://doi.org/10.3390/s22228618
Caputo S, Mucchi L, Umair MA, Meucci M, Seminara M, Catani J. The Role of Bidirectional VLC Systems in Low-Latency 6G Vehicular Networks and Comparison with IEEE802.11p and LTE/5G C-V2X. Sensors. 2022; 22(22):8618. https://doi.org/10.3390/s22228618
Chicago/Turabian StyleCaputo, Stefano, Lorenzo Mucchi, Muhammad Ali Umair, Marco Meucci, Marco Seminara, and Jacopo Catani. 2022. "The Role of Bidirectional VLC Systems in Low-Latency 6G Vehicular Networks and Comparison with IEEE802.11p and LTE/5G C-V2X" Sensors 22, no. 22: 8618. https://doi.org/10.3390/s22228618
APA StyleCaputo, S., Mucchi, L., Umair, M. A., Meucci, M., Seminara, M., & Catani, J. (2022). The Role of Bidirectional VLC Systems in Low-Latency 6G Vehicular Networks and Comparison with IEEE802.11p and LTE/5G C-V2X. Sensors, 22(22), 8618. https://doi.org/10.3390/s22228618