2021
DOI: 10.1109/access.2021.3071726
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Sensor-Aided Beamwidth and Power Control for Next Generation Vehicular Communications

Abstract: Ultra-reliable low-latency Vehicle-to-Everything (V2X) communications are needed to meet the extreme requirements of enhanced driving applications. Millimeter-Wave (24.25-52.6 GHz) or sub-THz (>100 GHz) V2X communications are a viable solution, provided that the highly collimated beams are kept aligned during vehicles' maneuverings. In this work, we propose a sensor-assisted dynamic Beamwidth and Power Control (BPC) system to counteract the detrimental effect of vehicle dynamics, exploiting data collected by o… Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…Being able to proactively known the position of the communication counterpart allows a vehicle to determine the candidate pointing direction without iteratively searching for the best candidate beam, thus saving time and improving the communication efficiency. Moreover, if position information comes with the associated accuracy, a vehicle can also implement a beamwidth and power adaptation algorithm, where not only the pointing direction is dynamically computed, but also the size of the beam and the required transmission power are optimally adjusted [10]. The exchange of vehicle navigation information is used as enabler to fasten the alignment of narrow beams such that the higher data rates of high frequency (mmWave and FSO) links are fully exploited.…”
Section: Vehicular Communication: Methodologymentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Being able to proactively known the position of the communication counterpart allows a vehicle to determine the candidate pointing direction without iteratively searching for the best candidate beam, thus saving time and improving the communication efficiency. Moreover, if position information comes with the associated accuracy, a vehicle can also implement a beamwidth and power adaptation algorithm, where not only the pointing direction is dynamically computed, but also the size of the beam and the required transmission power are optimally adjusted [10]. The exchange of vehicle navigation information is used as enabler to fasten the alignment of narrow beams such that the higher data rates of high frequency (mmWave and FSO) links are fully exploited.…”
Section: Vehicular Communication: Methodologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Most of the research work is focused on the V2V link degradation due to beam misalignment as a consequence of vehicle mobility [5][6][7][8]10], but a study on V2I channel modeling has also been carried out to evaluated potential benefits of exploiting mmWave sparsity to design a robust beam alignment [9].…”
Section: Vehicular Communication: Methodologymentioning
confidence: 99%
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