Automotive Architecture Topologies: Analysis for Safety-Critical Autonomous Vehicle Applications

Safety-critical systems such as Advanced Driving Assistance Systems and Autonomous Vehicles require redundancy to satisfy their safety requirements and to be classified as fail-operational. Introducing redundancy in a system with high data rates and processing requirements also has a great impact on...

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Main Authors: Alessandro Frigerio, Bart Vermeulen, Kees G. W. Goossens
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IEEE 2021-01-01
Series:IEEE Access
Subjects:
AV
Online Access:https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9410252/
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spelling doaj-fdf3aaa77023405d883014fc1b27b1612021-04-29T23:00:28ZengIEEEIEEE Access2169-35362021-01-019628376284610.1109/ACCESS.2021.30748139410252Automotive Architecture Topologies: Analysis for Safety-Critical Autonomous Vehicle ApplicationsAlessandro Frigerio0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3232-4646Bart Vermeulen1https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1161-314XKees G. W. Goossens2https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7536-4050Department of Electrical Engineering, Eindhoven University of Technology, AZ, The NetherlandsNXP Semiconductors, Eindhoven, AE, The NetherlandsDepartment of Electrical Engineering, Eindhoven University of Technology, AZ, The NetherlandsSafety-critical systems such as Advanced Driving Assistance Systems and Autonomous Vehicles require redundancy to satisfy their safety requirements and to be classified as fail-operational. Introducing redundancy in a system with high data rates and processing requirements also has a great impact on architectural design decisions. The current self-driving vehicle prototypes do not use a standardized system architecture but base their design on existing vehicles and the available components. In this work, we provide a novel analysis framework that allows us to qualitatively and quantitatively evaluate an in-vehicle architecture topology and compare it with others. With this framework, we evaluate different variants of two common topologies: domain and zone-based architectures. Each topology is evaluated in terms of total cost, failure probability, total communication cable length, communication load distribution, and functional load distribution. We introduce redundancy in selected parts of the systems using our automated process provided in the framework, in a safety-oriented design process that enables the ISO26262 Automotive Safety Integrity Level decomposition technique. After every design step, the architecture is re-evaluated. The advantages and disadvantages of the different architecture variants are evaluated to guide the designer towards the choice of correct architecture, with a focus on the introduction of redundancy.https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9410252/ADASASIL decompositionAVfunctional safetyredundancysafety-critical systems
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alessandro Frigerio
Bart Vermeulen
Kees G. W. Goossens
spellingShingle Alessandro Frigerio
Bart Vermeulen
Kees G. W. Goossens
Automotive Architecture Topologies: Analysis for Safety-Critical Autonomous Vehicle Applications
IEEE Access
ADAS
ASIL decomposition
AV
functional safety
redundancy
safety-critical systems
author_facet Alessandro Frigerio
Bart Vermeulen
Kees G. W. Goossens
author_sort Alessandro Frigerio
title Automotive Architecture Topologies: Analysis for Safety-Critical Autonomous Vehicle Applications
title_short Automotive Architecture Topologies: Analysis for Safety-Critical Autonomous Vehicle Applications
title_full Automotive Architecture Topologies: Analysis for Safety-Critical Autonomous Vehicle Applications
title_fullStr Automotive Architecture Topologies: Analysis for Safety-Critical Autonomous Vehicle Applications
title_full_unstemmed Automotive Architecture Topologies: Analysis for Safety-Critical Autonomous Vehicle Applications
title_sort automotive architecture topologies: analysis for safety-critical autonomous vehicle applications
publisher IEEE
series IEEE Access
issn 2169-3536
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Safety-critical systems such as Advanced Driving Assistance Systems and Autonomous Vehicles require redundancy to satisfy their safety requirements and to be classified as fail-operational. Introducing redundancy in a system with high data rates and processing requirements also has a great impact on architectural design decisions. The current self-driving vehicle prototypes do not use a standardized system architecture but base their design on existing vehicles and the available components. In this work, we provide a novel analysis framework that allows us to qualitatively and quantitatively evaluate an in-vehicle architecture topology and compare it with others. With this framework, we evaluate different variants of two common topologies: domain and zone-based architectures. Each topology is evaluated in terms of total cost, failure probability, total communication cable length, communication load distribution, and functional load distribution. We introduce redundancy in selected parts of the systems using our automated process provided in the framework, in a safety-oriented design process that enables the ISO26262 Automotive Safety Integrity Level decomposition technique. After every design step, the architecture is re-evaluated. The advantages and disadvantages of the different architecture variants are evaluated to guide the designer towards the choice of correct architecture, with a focus on the introduction of redundancy.
topic ADAS
ASIL decomposition
AV
functional safety
redundancy
safety-critical systems
url https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9410252/
work_keys_str_mv AT alessandrofrigerio automotivearchitecturetopologiesanalysisforsafetycriticalautonomousvehicleapplications
AT bartvermeulen automotivearchitecturetopologiesanalysisforsafetycriticalautonomousvehicleapplications
AT keesgwgoossens automotivearchitecturetopologiesanalysisforsafetycriticalautonomousvehicleapplications
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