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Using Radio Technical Commission for Maritime Services Corrections in a Consumer-Grade Lane-Level Positioning System for Connected Vehicles
- Nigel Williams - University of California at Riverside, USA ,
- Alex Vu - University of California at Riverside, USA ,
- Guoyuan Wu - University of California at Riverside, Center for Environmental Research & Technology, USA ,
- Matthew Barth - University of California at Riverside, USA ,
- Kun Zhou - University of California at Berkeley California PATH, USA
Journal Article
12-06-04-0028
ISSN: 2574-0741, e-ISSN: 2574-075X
Sector:
Topic:
Citation:
Williams, N., Vu, A., Wu, G., Barth, M. et al., "Using Radio Technical Commission for Maritime Services Corrections in a Consumer-Grade Lane-Level Positioning System for Connected Vehicles," SAE Intl. J CAV 6(4):2023, https://doi.org/10.4271/12-06-04-0028.
Language:
English
Abstract:
Connected vehicle (CV) technology has the potential to greatly improve the
safety, mobility, and environmental sustainability of traffic. Many CV
applications require the vehicle position as input, which is primarily provided
by global navigation satellite systems (GNSS). Although a large number of those
applications (e.g., Intersection Movement Assist) require vehicle positioning to
have lane-level accuracy, it has been shown that the type of positioning system
typically used by CVs currently cannot provide consistent lane-level accuracy,
even under open-sky conditions. In order to address this gap, we have evaluated
an enhanced positioning system that adds little, if any, to the cost of the CV.
It consists of a single-frequency real-time kinematic (RTK)-capable GNSS
receiver onboard the vehicle, which utilizes Radio Technical Commission for
Maritime Services (RTCM) differential corrections transmitted over dedicated
short-range communications (DSRC) by the roadside infrastructure. Tests on a
moving vehicle show that this system could provide lane-level accuracy over 95%
of the time in open-sky conditions. These tests also show the DSRC to be an
effective means of disseminating RTCM corrections, given the intersection
spacings and communication ranges in the test. However, neither RTCM nor the
more commonly used space-based augmentation system (SBAS) differential
corrections appeared to improve the positioning accuracy of GNSS in urban
canyons.