DSRC versus 4G-LTE for Connected Vehicle Applications: A Study on Field Experiments of Vehicular Communication Performance

Dedicated short-range communication (DSRC) and 4G-LTE are two widely used candidate schemes for Connected Vehicle (CV) applications. It is thus of great necessity to compare these two most viable communication standards and clarify which one can meet the requirements of most V2X scenarios with respe...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Zhigang Xu, Xiaochi Li, Xiangmo Zhao, Michael H. Zhang, Zhongren Wang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi-Wiley 2017-01-01
Series:Journal of Advanced Transportation
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2017/2750452
id doaj-35da38e94f6a4cb5ad6ccbb75082aa25
record_format Article
spelling doaj-35da38e94f6a4cb5ad6ccbb75082aa252020-11-25T00:48:41ZengHindawi-WileyJournal of Advanced Transportation0197-67292042-31952017-01-01201710.1155/2017/27504522750452DSRC versus 4G-LTE for Connected Vehicle Applications: A Study on Field Experiments of Vehicular Communication PerformanceZhigang Xu0Xiaochi Li1Xiangmo Zhao2Michael H. Zhang3Zhongren Wang4School of Information Engineering, Chang’an University, No. 435, The Middle Section of South 2nd-Ring Road, Xi’an, Shaanxi 710064, ChinaSchool of Information Engineering, Chang’an University, No. 435, The Middle Section of South 2nd-Ring Road, Xi’an, Shaanxi 710064, ChinaSchool of Information Engineering, Chang’an University, No. 435, The Middle Section of South 2nd-Ring Road, Xi’an, Shaanxi 710064, ChinaDepartment of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of California, Davis, 3145 Ghausi Hall, One Shields Avenue, Davis, CA 95616, USACalifornia Department of Transportation, Division of Maintenance, Headquarters, 2389 Gateway Oaks Drive, No. 200, MS 91, Sacramento, CA 958833, USADedicated short-range communication (DSRC) and 4G-LTE are two widely used candidate schemes for Connected Vehicle (CV) applications. It is thus of great necessity to compare these two most viable communication standards and clarify which one can meet the requirements of most V2X scenarios with respect to road safety, traffic efficiency, and infotainment. To the best of our knowledge, almost all the existing studies on comparing the feasibility of DRSC or LTE in V2X applications use software-based simulations, which may not represent realistic constraints. In this paper, a Connected Vehicle test-bed is established, which integrates the DSRC roadside units, 4G-LTE cellular communication stations, and vehicular on-board terminals. Three Connected Vehicle application scenarios are set as Collision Avoidance, Traffic Text Message Broadcast, and Multimedia File Download, respectively. A software tool is developed to record GPS positions/velocities of the test vehicles and record certain wireless communication performance indicators. The experiments have been carried out under different conditions. According to our results, 4G-LTE is more preferred for the nonsafety applications, such as traffic information transmission, file download, or Internet accessing, which does not necessarily require the high-speed real-time communication, while for the safety applications, such as Collision Avoidance or electronic traffic sign, DSRC outperforms the 4G-LTE.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2017/2750452
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zhigang Xu
Xiaochi Li
Xiangmo Zhao
Michael H. Zhang
Zhongren Wang
spellingShingle Zhigang Xu
Xiaochi Li
Xiangmo Zhao
Michael H. Zhang
Zhongren Wang
DSRC versus 4G-LTE for Connected Vehicle Applications: A Study on Field Experiments of Vehicular Communication Performance
Journal of Advanced Transportation
author_facet Zhigang Xu
Xiaochi Li
Xiangmo Zhao
Michael H. Zhang
Zhongren Wang
author_sort Zhigang Xu
title DSRC versus 4G-LTE for Connected Vehicle Applications: A Study on Field Experiments of Vehicular Communication Performance
title_short DSRC versus 4G-LTE for Connected Vehicle Applications: A Study on Field Experiments of Vehicular Communication Performance
title_full DSRC versus 4G-LTE for Connected Vehicle Applications: A Study on Field Experiments of Vehicular Communication Performance
title_fullStr DSRC versus 4G-LTE for Connected Vehicle Applications: A Study on Field Experiments of Vehicular Communication Performance
title_full_unstemmed DSRC versus 4G-LTE for Connected Vehicle Applications: A Study on Field Experiments of Vehicular Communication Performance
title_sort dsrc versus 4g-lte for connected vehicle applications: a study on field experiments of vehicular communication performance
publisher Hindawi-Wiley
series Journal of Advanced Transportation
issn 0197-6729
2042-3195
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Dedicated short-range communication (DSRC) and 4G-LTE are two widely used candidate schemes for Connected Vehicle (CV) applications. It is thus of great necessity to compare these two most viable communication standards and clarify which one can meet the requirements of most V2X scenarios with respect to road safety, traffic efficiency, and infotainment. To the best of our knowledge, almost all the existing studies on comparing the feasibility of DRSC or LTE in V2X applications use software-based simulations, which may not represent realistic constraints. In this paper, a Connected Vehicle test-bed is established, which integrates the DSRC roadside units, 4G-LTE cellular communication stations, and vehicular on-board terminals. Three Connected Vehicle application scenarios are set as Collision Avoidance, Traffic Text Message Broadcast, and Multimedia File Download, respectively. A software tool is developed to record GPS positions/velocities of the test vehicles and record certain wireless communication performance indicators. The experiments have been carried out under different conditions. According to our results, 4G-LTE is more preferred for the nonsafety applications, such as traffic information transmission, file download, or Internet accessing, which does not necessarily require the high-speed real-time communication, while for the safety applications, such as Collision Avoidance or electronic traffic sign, DSRC outperforms the 4G-LTE.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2017/2750452
work_keys_str_mv AT zhigangxu dsrcversus4glteforconnectedvehicleapplicationsastudyonfieldexperimentsofvehicularcommunicationperformance
AT xiaochili dsrcversus4glteforconnectedvehicleapplicationsastudyonfieldexperimentsofvehicularcommunicationperformance
AT xiangmozhao dsrcversus4glteforconnectedvehicleapplicationsastudyonfieldexperimentsofvehicularcommunicationperformance
AT michaelhzhang dsrcversus4glteforconnectedvehicleapplicationsastudyonfieldexperimentsofvehicularcommunicationperformance
AT zhongrenwang dsrcversus4glteforconnectedvehicleapplicationsastudyonfieldexperimentsofvehicularcommunicationperformance
_version_ 1725254976223051776