Tesis Doctorado / doctoral Thesis
Millimeterwave channel characterization for wehicular communications
Fecha
2022-12Registro en:
1018183
57218950395
Autor
AZPILICUETA FERNANDEZ DE LAS HERAS, LEYRE; 736594
Rodríguez Corbo, Fidel Alejandro
Institución
Resumen
The increasing demand for more sensors inside vehicles pursues the intention of making
vehicles more “intelligent”. This vision of fully connected, all-sensed, and autonomous
cars are becoming more tangible and will become a reality in the coming years. The use
of these intelligent transport systems will allow the integration of efficient management in
terms of route control, fuel consumption, and traffic, among others. Wireless connections
between vehicles, infrastructure, and pedestrians will be required to achieve this technology.
Although technologies for this purpose already exist (Dedicate Short Range Communication,
Cellular Mobile Network), their incursion into the market is still affected by different limitations.
The growing interest in achieving higher transfer rates has begun to look towards a new
route in terms of using the electromagnetic spectrum. The millimeter wave frequency bands
have enough bandwidth to increase the capabilities of these systems, allowing the inclusion
of real-time raw data transfer systems, entertainment, cloud computing, and other advantages.
Despite these benefits, the use of millimeter frequency bands entails significant challenges for
implementation (high losses due to atmospheric absorption, poor diffraction, high susceptibility
to blocking, etc.). Although the disadvantages are several, in recent years academic and
industrial activity in this research area has increased in response to the need for higher transfer
rates.
Before all this becomes a reality, a strict analysis of the characteristics associated with
the wireless transmission channel at millimeter wave frequency bands must be conducted. The
scenario in which vehicular communications occur is particularly unique, conditioned by low
antenna heights, high mobility of the environment and scatterers around it, dynamic environments,
and multiple link types. This Ph.D. research is aimed at providing knowledge in this
study area, specifically the characterization of electromagnetic phenomena at millimeter wave
frequency bands associated with vehicular communication. To achieve this objective, this research
presents an empirical-experimental approach and simulation in ray-launching software.
As the main results of this research, the author presents an in-depth characterization of
small- and large-scale parameters within the vehicular wireless channel propagation media for
millimeter wave frequency bands. Different scenarios and vehicular link types are taken into
consideration and several remarks are presented for each of them. In parallel, various millimeter
wave support capabilities are added to the in-house ray launching software to expand
its features to dynamic vehicular scenarios and multi-antenna emulation. The correct characterization
of these phenomena and the step-up improvements to the ray launching software
will allow the evaluation of protocols in higher communication layers, as well as assess the
viability of this technology in vehicular communication standards.