Dependable vehicular wireless communication links under harsh propagation conditions are of prime importance for future intelligent transportation systems (ITS). Such intelligent transportation systems will provide services like collision avoidance, wrong way driver warning, intelligent routing, enable e-mobility or the efficient operation of highspeed railway systems.
Vehicular wireless communications is characterized by highly time-variant and non-stationary wave propagation conditions. In this course we will discuss channel characterization method as well as signal processing algorithms for channel estimation and data detection in vehicular wireless communications. We exemplify the theory by discussing the design of practical vehicular communication standards.
Additionally, the fundamentals of ultrawideband radio channels and transmission schemes are covered.
In this course we will cover the fundamentals of linear-time variant systems to characterize wireless communication channels under strong time-variance and in non-stationary environments. We discuss the measurement of such non-stationary fading processes based on channel-sounding and their characterization and emulation with graded complexity form ray-tracing to tap delay line models.
For the transceiver design we focus on systems based on orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (IEEE 802.11p and LTE-A) and discuss advanced iterative channel estimation methods from the classical Wiener filter to two-dimensional adaptive subspace models.
To exploit the diversity in vehicular channels we introduce the concept of channel prediction as basis for antenna selection, coded cooperation and interference alignment for mobile users. Here we introduce the basic concepts as well as the complexity caused by the time-variant fading process.
For wireless communication from vehicle to vehicle as well as between the vehicles and the road infrastructure, the standard IEEE 802.11p (also known as ETSI ITS G5) around 5.9 GHz is of much importance.
For wireless connectivity of sensors on board of vehicles, ultrawideband radio technology is discussed which features high power efficiency. In this context, the standard IEEE 802.15.4a is analysed.
First lecture: Monday, 1.12.2014, 14:00 - 15:30, SEM 389-2, room no. CG0402
This lecture is given twice a week:
Mondays 14:00 - 15:30, CG 0402
Wednesdays 15:00 - 16:30, CG 0402