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Characterization of Quasi-Stationarity Regions for Vehicle-to-Vehicle Radio Channels

01 May 2015

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We analyze the nonwide-sense-stationarity (nonWSS) of vehicle-to-vehicle (V2V) radio channels using three metrics: 1) the correlation matrix distance (CMD); 2) the wideband spectral divergence (SD); and 3) the shadow fading correlation. The analysis is based on measurements carried out at 5.3 GHz using a 30 × 4 MIMO system in suburban, urban, and underground parking areas. Several factors such as the existence of a line-of-sight (LOS), the speed of cars, and the antenna array size and configuration are considered in the analysis of non-WSS. It is found that quasi-stationarity region ranges from 3 to 80 m in different V2V scenarios, and is strongly affected by the above factors. Based on the comparison of the equivalent quasi-stationarity region size estimated by the three metrics, it is suggested to use SD and shadowing correlation metrics for systems with small electrical array apertures and to use CMD metric only for arrays with large electrical apertures.