Coexistence of Dedicated Short Range Communications (DSRC) and Wi-Fi: Implications to Wi-Fi performance

The 5.9 GHz band is being actively explored for possible spectrum sharing opportunities between Dedicated Short Range Communications (DSRC) and IEEE 802.11ac networks in order to address the increasing demand for bandwidth-intensive Wi-Fi applications. In this paper, we study the implications of this spectrum sharing to the performance of Wi-Fi systems. Through experiments performed on our testbed, we first investigate band sharing options available for Wi-Fi devices. Using experimental results, we show the need for using conservative Wi-Fi transmission parameters to enable harmonious coexistence between DSRC and Wi-Fi. Moreover, we show that under the current 802.11ac standard, certain channelization options, particularly the high bandwidth ones, cannot be used by Wi-Fi devices without causing interference to the DSRC nodes. Under these constraints, we propose a Real-time Channelization Algorithm (RCA) for Wi-Fi Access Points (APs) operating in the shared spectrum. Evaluation of the proposed algorithm using a prototype implementation on commodity hardware as well as via simulations show that informed channelization decisions can significantly increase Wi-Fi throughput compared to static channelization schemes.

[1]  Parth H. Pathak,et al.  A first look at 802.11ac in action: Energy efficiency and interference characterization , 2014, 2014 IFIP Networking Conference.

[2]  Edward W. Knightly,et al.  IEEE 802.11ac: from channelization to multi-user MIMO , 2013, IEEE Communications Magazine.

[3]  Jim Lansford,et al.  Coexistence of unlicensed devices with DSRC systems in the 5.9 GHz ITS band , 2013, 2013 IEEE Vehicular Networking Conference.

[4]  Srikanth V. Krishnamurthy,et al.  Auto-configuration of 802.11n WLANs , 2010, CoNEXT.

[5]  Matthew S. Gast,et al.  802.11ac: A Survival Guide , 2013 .

[6]  Kevin C. Almeroth,et al.  The impact of channel bonding on 802.11n network management , 2011, CoNEXT '11.

[7]  Paramvir Bahl,et al.  A case for adapting channel width in wireless networks , 2008, SIGCOMM '08.

[8]  Hyogon Kim,et al.  On the coexistence of IEEE 802.11ac and WAVE in the 5.9 GHz Band , 2014, IEEE Communications Magazine.

[9]  Minyoung Park,et al.  IEEE 802.11ac: Dynamic Bandwidth Channel Access , 2011, 2011 IEEE International Conference on Communications (ICC).