To deploy effective communication systems in vehicle cavities, it is critical to understand the time variation of the in-vehicle channel. Initially, rapid channel variation is addressed, which is characterized in the frequency domain as a Doppler spread. It is then shown that, for typical Doppler spreads, the in-vehicle channel is underspread, and therefore, the information capacity approaches the capacity achieved with perfect receiver channel state information in the infinite bandwidth limit. Measurements are performed for a number of channel variation scenarios (e.g., absorptive motion, reflective motion, one antenna moving, and both antennas moving) at a number of carrier frequencies and for a number of cavity loading scenarios. It is found that the Doppler spread increases with carrier frequency; however, the type of channel variation and loading appear to have little effect. Channel variation over a longer time period is also measured to characterize the slower channel variation. Channel variation is a function of the cavity occupant motion, which is difficult to model theoretically; therefore, an empirical model for the slow channel variation is proposed, which leads to an improved estimate of the channel state. © 2014 IEEE.
CITATION STYLE
Herbert, S., Wassell, I., Loh, T. H., & Rigelsford, J. (2014). Characterizing the spectral properties and time variation of the in-vehicle wireless communication channel. IEEE Transactions on Communications, 62(7), 2390–2399. https://doi.org/10.1109/TCOMM.2014.2328635
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