Department of Electrical and Electronics Engineering2024-11-09201997817281457162157-985710.1109/VNC48660.2019.90627742-s2.0-85084005256https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14288/3991Vehicular visible light communication (V2LC) is expected to complement radio frequency (RF) technologies for higher reliability in vehicular connectivity. Since high mobility makes the line-of-sight V2LC channel very dynamic, an adaptive physical layer (PHY) design is required for realizing a rate-optimal and reliable V2LC system. Existing studies on adaptive PHY designs have mostly considered indoor scenarios with low mobility and require a feedback channel for both reporting the received signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) to the transmitter and channel equalization (CE), which increases system complexity and introduces overhead. This paper presents a novel low-complexity adaptive PHY design that provides rate-optimal and reliable V2LC without a feedback channel. The proposed design utilizes a priori measurements of the BER with respect to SNR, which are static for V2LC on the road. SNR is predicted in real-time based on the relative locations of the transmitting (TX) and receiving (RX) vehicles using a path loss model based on a priori measurements of the SNR-distance relationship and the polar beam pattern for a given TX/RX pair, in a given setting. The proposed design is validated via night-time experiments with On-Off-Keying (OOK), 4-Pulse-Position Modulation (4-PPM) and Direct Current-Biased Optical OFDM (DCO-OFDM). The proposed location-aware adaptive PHY design can be expanded for general reliable rate-optimal V2LC use by updating the path loss model with additional measurements for different settings.pdfOptical wirelessOrthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM)Location-aware adaptive physical layer design for vehicular visible light communicationConference proceedinghttps://doi.org/10.1109/VNC48660.2019.9062774N/ANOIR02229