Jose Manuel Gimenez-Guzman;Israel Leyva-Mayorga;Amirhossein Azarbahram;Onel Alcaraz López;Petar Popovski
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Energy-Autonomous Roadside Nodes in V2I Using RF Energy Harvesting
Future intelligent transportation systems will require complex networking infrastructures with communication among a huge number of vehicles and roadside nodes to support services such as autonomous driving. However, the deployment and operation of such a large number of roadside nodes is expensive due to either the cost of battery replacement or the maintenance of a continuous energy supply in long highways or rural areas. In this work, we evaluate the feasibility of a roadside unit harvesting energy from radio frequency (RF) signals transmitted by a nearby moving vehicle, with the incentive of using a part of the harvested energy to transmit small amounts of data to the vehicle. We consider a realistic model with the timing elements related to the movement of the vehicle, beam tracking errors, a non-linear model for energy harvesting, and potential line-of-sight obstructions in multi-vehicle scenarios. Results show that, with typical off-the-shelf components, it is feasible to use the RF harvested energy to transmit between a few hundred and several thousand bytes, depending on the speed of vehicles and the frequency of operation for energy harvesting, among other parameters.
期刊介绍:
The IEEE Open Journal of the Communications Society (OJ-COMS) is an open access, all-electronic journal that publishes original high-quality manuscripts on advances in the state of the art of telecommunications systems and networks. The papers in IEEE OJ-COMS are included in Scopus. Submissions reporting new theoretical findings (including novel methods, concepts, and studies) and practical contributions (including experiments and development of prototypes) are welcome. Additionally, survey and tutorial articles are considered. The IEEE OJCOMS received its debut impact factor of 7.9 according to the Journal Citation Reports (JCR) 2023.
The IEEE Open Journal of the Communications Society covers science, technology, applications and standards for information organization, collection and transfer using electronic, optical and wireless channels and networks. Some specific areas covered include:
Systems and network architecture, control and management
Protocols, software, and middleware
Quality of service, reliability, and security
Modulation, detection, coding, and signaling
Switching and routing
Mobile and portable communications
Terminals and other end-user devices
Networks for content distribution and distributed computing
Communications-based distributed resources control.