Performance Evaluation of NOMA for Sidelink Cellular-V2X Mode 4 in Driver Assistance System With Crash Warning

This article presents the performance characteristics of a potential extension of sidelink cellular-vehicle-to-everything mode 4 (simply called mode 4) with uplink non-orthogonal multiple access (UL-NOMA), named SPS-NOMA, in driver assistance systems with a crash warning. In SPS-NOMA, multiple nodes...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Takeshi Hirai, Tutomu Murase
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IEEE 2020-01-01
Series:IEEE Access
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9195491/
id doaj-1ccf747c08b743a983aa0d1b8daf82d1
record_format Article
spelling doaj-1ccf747c08b743a983aa0d1b8daf82d12021-03-30T03:48:27ZengIEEEIEEE Access2169-35362020-01-01816832116833210.1109/ACCESS.2020.30237219195491Performance Evaluation of NOMA for Sidelink Cellular-V2X Mode 4 in Driver Assistance System With Crash WarningTakeshi Hirai0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1090-4770Tutomu Murase1Graduate School of Informatics, Nagoya University, Nagoya, JapanInformation Technology Center, Nagoya University, Nagoya, JapanThis article presents the performance characteristics of a potential extension of sidelink cellular-vehicle-to-everything mode 4 (simply called mode 4) with uplink non-orthogonal multiple access (UL-NOMA), named SPS-NOMA, in driver assistance systems with a crash warning. In SPS-NOMA, multiple nodes (e.g., cars or pedestrians with communication equipment) simultaneously broadcast their data frames at a time-frequency resource selected by sensing-based semi-persistent scheduling (sensing-based SPS), the distributed random access protocol of mode 4. The transmitted signals are superposed at the receiver sides, and successive interference canceller (SIC) supports decoding the superposed signal. In SPS-NOMA, sensing-based SPS is expected to enhance the signal-to-interference-plus-noise ratio at each SIC iteration. The effect boosts the performance gains of the SIC in broadcast cases and mitigates the channel congestion. Our computer simulations highlighted that SPS-NOMA improved the performance of the ordinary mode 4 by 38% in the fundamental node distribution model. In conclusion, SPS-NOMA is expected to be the next generation sidelink C-V2X as the extended mode 4.https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9195491/Sidelink cellular-vehicle-to-everything mode 4sensing-based semi-persistent schedulingnon-orthogonal multiple accesssuccessive interference cancellercrash warning
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Takeshi Hirai
Tutomu Murase
spellingShingle Takeshi Hirai
Tutomu Murase
Performance Evaluation of NOMA for Sidelink Cellular-V2X Mode 4 in Driver Assistance System With Crash Warning
IEEE Access
Sidelink cellular-vehicle-to-everything mode 4
sensing-based semi-persistent scheduling
non-orthogonal multiple access
successive interference canceller
crash warning
author_facet Takeshi Hirai
Tutomu Murase
author_sort Takeshi Hirai
title Performance Evaluation of NOMA for Sidelink Cellular-V2X Mode 4 in Driver Assistance System With Crash Warning
title_short Performance Evaluation of NOMA for Sidelink Cellular-V2X Mode 4 in Driver Assistance System With Crash Warning
title_full Performance Evaluation of NOMA for Sidelink Cellular-V2X Mode 4 in Driver Assistance System With Crash Warning
title_fullStr Performance Evaluation of NOMA for Sidelink Cellular-V2X Mode 4 in Driver Assistance System With Crash Warning
title_full_unstemmed Performance Evaluation of NOMA for Sidelink Cellular-V2X Mode 4 in Driver Assistance System With Crash Warning
title_sort performance evaluation of noma for sidelink cellular-v2x mode 4 in driver assistance system with crash warning
publisher IEEE
series IEEE Access
issn 2169-3536
publishDate 2020-01-01
description This article presents the performance characteristics of a potential extension of sidelink cellular-vehicle-to-everything mode 4 (simply called mode 4) with uplink non-orthogonal multiple access (UL-NOMA), named SPS-NOMA, in driver assistance systems with a crash warning. In SPS-NOMA, multiple nodes (e.g., cars or pedestrians with communication equipment) simultaneously broadcast their data frames at a time-frequency resource selected by sensing-based semi-persistent scheduling (sensing-based SPS), the distributed random access protocol of mode 4. The transmitted signals are superposed at the receiver sides, and successive interference canceller (SIC) supports decoding the superposed signal. In SPS-NOMA, sensing-based SPS is expected to enhance the signal-to-interference-plus-noise ratio at each SIC iteration. The effect boosts the performance gains of the SIC in broadcast cases and mitigates the channel congestion. Our computer simulations highlighted that SPS-NOMA improved the performance of the ordinary mode 4 by 38% in the fundamental node distribution model. In conclusion, SPS-NOMA is expected to be the next generation sidelink C-V2X as the extended mode 4.
topic Sidelink cellular-vehicle-to-everything mode 4
sensing-based semi-persistent scheduling
non-orthogonal multiple access
successive interference canceller
crash warning
url https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9195491/
work_keys_str_mv AT takeshihirai performanceevaluationofnomaforsidelinkcellularv2xmode4indriverassistancesystemwithcrashwarning
AT tutomumurase performanceevaluationofnomaforsidelinkcellularv2xmode4indriverassistancesystemwithcrashwarning
_version_ 1724182814521294848