Performance Impact Analysis of Beam Switching in Millimeter Wave Vehicular Communications
O. Kanhere, A. Chopra, A. Thornburg, T. S. Rappaport, and S. S., Ghassemzadeh

TL;DR
This study analyzes how beam switching frequency and hardware configurations affect millimeter wave vehicular communication performance, providing real-world data-driven recommendations for optimizing throughput in dynamic traffic environments.
Contribution
It presents the first real-world measurement-based analysis of beam sweeping periods and RX array configurations for millimeter wave V2I communications in vehicular settings.
Findings
A 300 ms beam sweeping period maximizes throughput at 10.5 mph.
Using fewer RX chains reduces hardware cost but decreases throughput by about 10%.
Multiple RX chains improve robustness to beam misalignment.
Abstract
Millimeter wave wireless spectrum deployments will allow vehicular communications to share high data rate vehicular sensor data in real-time. The highly directional nature of wireless links in millimeter spectral bands will require continuous channel measurements to ensure the transmitter (TX) and receiver (RX) beams are aligned to provide the best channel. Using real-world vehicular mmWave measurement data at 28 GHz, we determine the optimal beam sweeping period, i.e. the frequency of the channel measurements, to align the RX beams to the best channel directions for maximizing the vehicle-to-infrastructure (V2I) throughput. We show that in a realistic vehicular traffic environment in Austin, TX, for a vehicle traveling at an average speed of 10.5 mph, a beam sweeping period of 300 ms in future V2I communication standards would maximize the V2I throughput, using a system of four RX…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMillimeter-Wave Propagation and Modeling · Advanced MIMO Systems Optimization · Vehicular Ad Hoc Networks (VANETs)
