dc.description.abstract |
In recent years, the Intelligent Transportation System (ITS) is gaining popularity for
better road operations and convenience. One of the major application of ITS is integrating
communication, control, computational, and sensing technologies deployed to improve
road safety and efficiency, enhance mobility and reduce congestion. Vehicular
communication technologies enable a decentralized network composed of moving
vehicles which are equipped with wireless processing devices and Road Side Units
(RSUs). Such networks allow vehicles for real-time exchange of traffic information with
or without any support from fixed infrastructure. In vehicular ad hoc networks
(VANETs), one major task is the distribution of safety alert messages generated by
several interrelated applications. Safety applications are commonly linked to the
hazardous circumstances that are accidents, traffic jams and pile ups. Thus, these
applications require smaller data dissemination delay, vast coverage and unfailing
delivery to all intended vehicles inside the vicinity. By considering the high speed of
vehicles, VANETs present several unique challenges likely unbounded network size and
topology, continual density variations, broadcast oriented communication, partitioned
networks and intermittent connections among vehicles. This thesis emphasizes on the
design and development of a data dissemination protocol to address the aforementioned
challenges satisfying the provision of both highway and urban scenarios under varying
traffic conditions.
At first, this thesis provided a comprehensive comparative study of numerous multihop
data dissemination protocols for VANETs. To achieve this objective, a large set of
top quality references are considered which has been published during the preceding
decade. Herein, a new scenario-driven taxonomy of data dissemination protocols is
presented which assists the readers to review the interest of research community,
advancement and innovation in the relevant technologies. After that an efficient and
reliable data dissemination protocol is developed to improve the existing data
ABSTRACT
IX
dissemination problems in VANETs working evenly in highway and urban scenarios
under varying traffic densities. In this context, a store-carry-forward mechanism is
employed to deal with disconnected sparse networks and a timer based broadcast
suppression mechanism to mitigate the broadcast storm in dense networks. In addition,
the proposed data dissemination solution is modified further to deal with scalability
issues of vehicular networks. Thus, a Next Forwarding Vehicle (NFV) selection
algorithm is used to select best vehicles as next forwarders of data packet inside vicinity.
Afterward, this research addressed the challenging issue of data dissemination across
network partitions. To overcome this issue, vehicles outside the Concerned Area (CA) are
used for successful data delivery to all intended vehicles across the network partitions in
urban scenarios. Finally, a mathematical model is developed for optimum NFV selection
during data dissemination process. In this regard, Analytical Network Process (ANP)
method is used to calculate the forwarding priorities of vehicles and selects the optimal
NFV(s). To this end, criteria based on direction, position, and distance information of
vehicles (with respect to the source vehicle) is set to compute the corresponding priorities
of vehicles.
The performance comparison was carried by simulation, using VEINS framework
integrating the network simulator OMNET++ and mobility simulator SUMO. The
simulation results revealed that the proposed work has improved the performance of data
dissemination in VANETs against existing well-known data dissemination protocols. It
performed better in terms of coverage by achieving approx. 100% delivery ratio in
highway scenario. Even in partitioned urban scenario, it outperformed other evaluated
protocols by 30 % more coverage. In addition, among the group of protocols that provide
highest coverage, it showed reduced overhead by approximately 55%. In conclusion, the
proposed protocol has significantly improved the data dissemination performance in
terms of data packet delivery with acceptable minimum delay, reduced packet collisions
and low overhead. |
en_US |