
On the use of non‐orthogonal multiple access for V2V message dissemination
Author(s) -
Benabdallah Fairouz,
Hamza Abdelkrim,
Becherif Mohamed
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
iet intelligent transport systems
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.579
H-Index - 45
eISSN - 1751-9578
pISSN - 1751-956X
DOI - 10.1049/iet-its.2018.5378
Subject(s) - spectral efficiency , throughput , computer science , dissemination , channel (broadcasting) , fading , computer network , interference (communication) , power control , power (physics) , real time computing , electronic engineering , wireless , telecommunications , engineering , physics , quantum mechanics
Vehicular networks are characterised by a high density of nodes moving at a high speed and accessing the medium simultaneously which enlarges the interference, decreases the network throughput and spectral efficiency. That increases the challenge of designing a reliable communication scheme to handle the particular characteristics of this network and ensure user fairness. Here, a new vehicle‐to‐vehicle communication scheme is proposed. It consists of using particular vehicles (selected upon their position) to disseminate the message using non‐orthogonal multiple access technique. Power domain NOMA allocates a great amount of power to the vehicle in poor conditions, which enhances the system power control; improve throughput and user fairness in comparison with the OMA‐based IEEE 802.11p standard. A log‐normal shadowing is considered to model the propagation channel. The simulation results show that considering a channel model where severe conditions of signal propagation are present, a more advanced receiver designs have to be proposed on the subject of channel estimation and equalisation to mitigate channel effect on the received data. However, even in a harsh fading environment, NOMA outperforms OMA in terms of network throughput, spectral efficiency, and user fairness, which makes it a very promising solution for future development of vehicular communication systems.