Automotive Ethernet Sample Clauses

Automotive Ethernet. ‌ ADAS as well as AD applications are pushing the boundaries of the needed band- width. The aforementioned increase, brings additional complexity in terms of cabling, computational power etc. According to the [26] “Ethernet deployment will reduce the cost and the current development, will make Ethernet viable”. The biggest challenges for the automotive Ethernet, are the low latencies in conjuction with the high bandwidth needs, which can be found in an E&E architectures of a vehicle [26]. In a vehicle environment there are stricter Electromagnetic Interference (EMI), Electromagnetic Compatibility (EMC) and Radio-Frequency Interference (RFI) requirements which need to be met [26]. These requirements affects the exist- ing specifications for the IEEE 802.3 and 802.1. Work groups have managed to generate an Ethernet flavor, which it is compatible with the automotive industry. The most common automotive Ethernet standard during the time of this thesis work, it is the 100 Mbps or as it is known 100BASE-T1 (or BroadR-Reach) [30]. According to the standard it requires a single twisted pair for full-duplex commu- nication. When it comes to the actual applications which can be supported, audio, video and generic data transfer in an ADAS context can be some of the use-cases. Due to the higher bandwidth requirements, the 1000BASE-T1 [31] it is the next step with 1Gbps frame rate. 1000BASE-T1 will allow transferring uncompressed video and audio and it will enable autonomous driving applications as well as low latency data transmission. In Figure 2.3 can be found the representation of the Ethernet packet. The payload of an Ethernet frame it is larger than CAN or Flexray frame, allowing higher data transfer. This is the main reason why automotive industry, it is leaning towards Ethernet protocol for future arhitectures.
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