TY - GEN
T1 - An improved routing protocol based on velocity and direction classification in vanet
AU - Guo, Fengyuan
AU - Yang, Yuliang
AU - An, Jianwei
AU - Zhu, Mengyu
PY - 2010
Y1 - 2010
N2 - An Ad-hoc NETwork consists of several mobile nodes that communicate with each other with no infrastructure. In the Vehicle Ad-hoc NETwork(VANET), moving vehicles are organized into a mobile wireless Ad-hoc NETwork to share online traffic information. VANET is a mobile Ad-hoc NETwork (MANET). However, routing protocols designed for MANET cannot be directly applied to VANET because of the intrinsic characteristics of VANET. One of the most important routing protocols used in Ad-hoc NETwork is AODV (Ad hoc On-Demand Distance Vector Routing). In this paper, we improved AODV based on velocity and direction classification (VDRP). By comparing the velocity and direction of other nodes with those of the local node, VDRP classifies the mobility relationship among the nodes into the following four categories: standing, following, unstable, and worst. Mobility relationship determines the suitable routing strategy that could improve the stability of routing. At the end of the study, we conducted a simulation test. Compared with AODV protocol, data transmitted successfully are 15 more in TCP connection, and time delay is reduced 50 in CBR connection when the account of the nodes is large. Simulation results show that VDRP performs better than AODV protocol in urban road circumstance.
AB - An Ad-hoc NETwork consists of several mobile nodes that communicate with each other with no infrastructure. In the Vehicle Ad-hoc NETwork(VANET), moving vehicles are organized into a mobile wireless Ad-hoc NETwork to share online traffic information. VANET is a mobile Ad-hoc NETwork (MANET). However, routing protocols designed for MANET cannot be directly applied to VANET because of the intrinsic characteristics of VANET. One of the most important routing protocols used in Ad-hoc NETwork is AODV (Ad hoc On-Demand Distance Vector Routing). In this paper, we improved AODV based on velocity and direction classification (VDRP). By comparing the velocity and direction of other nodes with those of the local node, VDRP classifies the mobility relationship among the nodes into the following four categories: standing, following, unstable, and worst. Mobility relationship determines the suitable routing strategy that could improve the stability of routing. At the end of the study, we conducted a simulation test. Compared with AODV protocol, data transmitted successfully are 15 more in TCP connection, and time delay is reduced 50 in CBR connection when the account of the nodes is large. Simulation results show that VDRP performs better than AODV protocol in urban road circumstance.
KW - Routing
KW - Traffic management
KW - Urban areas
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=78049502021&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1061/41127(382)224
DO - 10.1061/41127(382)224
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:78049502021
SN - 9780784411278
T3 - ICCTP 2010: Integrated Transportation Systems: Green, Intelligent, Reliable - Proceedings of the 10th International Conference of Chinese Transportation Professionals
SP - 2077
EP - 2085
BT - ICCTP 2010
T2 - 10th International Conference of Chinese Transportation Professionals - Integrated Transportation Systems: Green, Intelligent, Reliable, ICCTP 2010
Y2 - 4 August 2010 through 8 August 2010
ER -