Abstract:
Vehicle-to-vehicle (V2V) communication plays a pivotal role in intelligent transport systems (ITS)
with cellular-vehicle to everything (C-V2X) and IEEE 802.11p being the two competing enabling
technologies. This paper presents multi-dimensional discrete-time Markov chain (DTMC) based models
to study the medium access control (MAC) layer performance of the IEEE 802.11p standard and
C-V2X Mode 4. These models are coupled with an appropriate DTMC based queuing model, and
traffic generators for periodic cooperative awareness messages (CAMs) and event-driven decentralized
environmental notification messages (DENMs). Closed-form solutions for the steady-state probabilities
of the models are obtained, which are then utilized to derive expressions for several key performance
metrics. An application for a highway scenario is presented to provide numerical results and to draw
insights on the performance. In particular, a performance comparison between IEEE 802.11p and C-V2X
Mode 4 in terms of the average delay, the collision probability, and the channel utilization is presented.
The results show that IEEE 802.11p is superior in terms of average delay, whereas C-V2X Mode 4
Citation:
Wijesiri N.B.A., G. P., Haapola, J., & Samarasinghe, T. (2021). A Discrete-time markov chain based comparison of the MAC layer performance of C-V2X Mode 4 and IEEE 802.11p. IEEE Transactions on Communications, 69(4), 2505–2517. https://doi.org/10.1109/TCOMM.2020.3044340