144 research outputs found

    A Survey of Positioning Systems Using Visible LED Lights

    Get PDF
    © 2018 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. Permission from IEEE must be obtained for all other uses, in any current or future media, including reprinting/republishing this material for advertising or promotional purposes, creating new collective works, for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or reuse of any copyrighted component of this work in other works.As Global Positioning System (GPS) cannot provide satisfying performance in indoor environments, indoor positioning technology, which utilizes indoor wireless signals instead of GPS signals, has grown rapidly in recent years. Meanwhile, visible light communication (VLC) using light devices such as light emitting diodes (LEDs) has been deemed to be a promising candidate in the heterogeneous wireless networks that may collaborate with radio frequencies (RF) wireless networks. In particular, light-fidelity has a great potential for deployment in future indoor environments because of its high throughput and security advantages. This paper provides a comprehensive study of a novel positioning technology based on visible white LED lights, which has attracted much attention from both academia and industry. The essential characteristics and principles of this system are deeply discussed, and relevant positioning algorithms and designs are classified and elaborated. This paper undertakes a thorough investigation into current LED-based indoor positioning systems and compares their performance through many aspects, such as test environment, accuracy, and cost. It presents indoor hybrid positioning systems among VLC and other systems (e.g., inertial sensors and RF systems). We also review and classify outdoor VLC positioning applications for the first time. Finally, this paper surveys major advances as well as open issues, challenges, and future research directions in VLC positioning systems.Peer reviewe

    Infrastructure Wi-Fi for connected autonomous vehicle positioning : a review of the state-of-the-art

    Get PDF
    In order to realize intelligent vehicular transport networks and self driving cars, connected autonomous vehicles (CAVs) are required to be able to estimate their position to the nearest centimeter. Traditional positioning in CAVs is realized by using a global navigation satellite system (GNSS) such as global positioning system (GPS) or by fusing weighted location parameters from a GNSS with an inertial navigation systems (INSs). In urban environments where Wi-Fi coverage is ubiquitous and GNSS signals experience signal blockage, multipath or non line-of-sight (NLOS) propagation, enterprise or carrier-grade Wi-Fi networks can be opportunistically used for localization or “fused” with GNSS to improve the localization accuracy and precision. While GNSS-free localization systems are in the literature, a survey of vehicle localization from the perspective of a Wi-Fi anchor/infrastructure is limited. Consequently, this review seeks to investigate recent technological advances relating to positioning techniques between an ego vehicle and a vehicular network infrastructure. Also discussed in this paper is an analysis of the location accuracy, complexity and applicability of surveyed literature with respect to intelligent transportation system requirements for CAVs. It is envisaged that hybrid vehicular localization systems will enable pervasive localization services for CAVs as they travel through urban canyons, dense foliage or multi-story car parks

    An Efficient V2X Based Vehicle Localization Using Single RSU and Single Receiver

    Get PDF
    High accuracy vehicle localization information is critical for intelligent transportation systems and future autonomous vehicles. It is challenging to achieve the required centimeter-level localization accuracy, especially in urban or global navigation satellite system denied environments. Here we propose a vehicle-to-infrastructure (V2I)-based vehicle localization algorithm. First, it is low-cost and hardware requirements are simplified, the minimum requirement is a single roadside unit and single on-board receiver. Second, it is computationally efficient, the available V2I information is formulated as an over-determined system. Then, the vehicle position is estimated in a closed-form manner via the widely used weighted linear least squares (WLLS) method and meter level accuracy is achievable. Furthermore, the numerical performance of WLLS is consistent with the theoretical results in larger signal-to-noise ratio region

    Opportunistic Angle of Arrival Estimation in Impaired Scenarios

    Get PDF
    This work if focused on the analysis and the development of Angle of Arrival (AoA) radio localization methods. The radio positioning system considered is constituted by a radio source and by a receiving array of antennas. The positioning algorithms treated in this work are designed to have a passive and opportunistic approach. The opportunistic attribute implies that the radio localization algorithms are designed to provide the AoA estimation with nearly-zero information on the transmitted signals. No training sequences or waveforms custom designed for localization are taken into account. The localization is termed passive since there is no collaboration between the transmitter and the receiver during the localization process. Then, the algorithms treated in this work are designed to eavesdrop already existing communication signals and to locate their radio source with nearly-zero knowledge of the signal and without the collaboration of the transmitting node. First of all, AoA radio localization algorithms can be classified in terms of involved signals (narrowband or broadband), antenna array pattern (L-shaped, circular, etc.), signal structure (sinusoidal, training sequences, etc.), Differential Time of Arrival (D-ToA) / Differential Phase of Arrival (D-PoA) and collaborative/non collaborative. Than, the most detrimental effects for radio communications are treated: the multipath (MP) channels and the impaired hardware. A geometric model for the MP is analysed and implemented to test the robustness of the proposed methods. The effects of MP on the received signals statistics from the AoA estimation point-of-view are discussed. The hardware impairments for the most common components are introduced and their effects in the AoA estimation process are analysed. Two novel algorithms that exploits the AoA from signal snapshots acquired sequentially with a time division approach are presented. The acquired signals are QAM waveforms eavesdropped from a pre-existing communication. The proposed methods, namely Constellation Statistical Pattern IDentification and Overlap (CSP-IDO) and Bidimensional CSP-IDO (BCID), exploit the probability density function (pdf) of the received signals to obtain the D-PoA. Both CSP-IDO and BCID use the statistical pattern of received signals exploiting the transmitter statistical signature. Since the presence of hardware impairments modify the statistical pattern of the received signals, CSP-IDO and BCID are able to exploit it to improve the performance with respect to (w.r.t.) the ideal case. Since the proposed methods can be used with a switched antenna architecture they are implementable with a reduced hardware contrariwise to synchronous methods like MUltiple SIgnal Classification (MUSIC) that are not applicable. Then, two iterative AoA estimation algorithms for the dynamic tracking of moving radio sources are implemented. Statistical methods, namely PF, are used to implement the iterative tracking of the AoA from D-PoA measures in two different scenarios: automotive and Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV). The AoA tracking of an electric car signalling with a IEEE 802.11p-like standard is implemented using a test-bed and real measures elaborated with a the proposed Particle Swarm Adaptive Scattering (PSAS) algorithm. The tracking of a UAV moving in the 3D space is investigated emulating the UAV trajectory using the proposed Confined Area Random Aerial Trajectory Emulator (CARATE) algorithm

    Fastening the Initial Access in 5G NR Sidelink for 6G V2X Networks

    Full text link
    The ever-increasing demand for intelligent, automated, and connected mobility solutions pushes for the development of an innovative sixth Generation (6G) of cellular networks. A radical transformation on the physical layer of vehicular communications is planned, with a paradigm shift towards beam-based millimeter Waves or sub-Terahertz communications, which require precise beam pointing for guaranteeing the communication link, especially in high mobility. A key design aspect is a fast and proactive Initial Access (IA) algorithm to select the optimal beam to be used. In this work, we investigate alternative IA techniques to fasten the current fifth-generation (5G) standard, targeting an efficient 6G design. First, we discuss cooperative position-based schemes that rely on the position information. Then, motivated by the intuition of a non-uniform distribution of the communication directions due to road topology constraints, we design two Probabilistic Codebook (PCB) techniques of prioritized beams. In the first one, the PCBs are built leveraging past collected traffic information, while in the second one, we use the Hough Transform over the digital map to extract dominant road directions. We also show that the information coming from the angular probability distribution allows designing non-uniform codebook quantization, reducing the degradation of the performances compared to uniform one. Numerical simulation on realistic scenarios shows that PCBs-based beam selection outperforms the 5G standard in terms of the number of IA trials, with a performance comparable to position-based methods, without requiring the signaling of sensitive information

    Vehicular Connectivity on Complex Trajectories: Roadway-Geometry Aware ISAC Beam-tracking

    Get PDF
    In this paper, we propose sensing-assisted beamforming designs for vehicles on arbitrarily shaped roads by relying on integrated sensing and communication (ISAC) signalling. Specifically, we aim to address the limitations of conventional ISAC beam-tracking schemes that do not apply to complex road geometries. To improve the tracking accuracy and communication quality of service (QoS) in vehicle to infrastructure (V2I) networks, it is essential to model the complicated roadway geometry. To that end, we impose the curvilinear coordinate system (CCS) in an interacting multiple model extended Kalman filter (IMM-EKF) framework. By doing so, both the position and the motion of the vehicle on a complicated road can be explicitly modeled and precisely tracked attributing to the benefits from the CCS. Furthermore, an optimization problem is formulated to maximize the array gain by dynamically adjusting the array size and thereby controlling the beamwidth, which takes the performance loss caused by beam misalignment into account. Numerical simulations demonstrate that the roadway geometry-aware ISAC beamforming approach outperforms the communication-only-based and ISAC kinematic-only-based technique in tracking performance. Moreover, the effectiveness of the dynamic beamwidth design is also verified by our numerical results
    • …
    corecore