BS EN ISO 13141:2024 – TC
$246.62
Tracked Changes. Electronic fee collection. Localization augmentation communication for autonomous systems
Published By | Publication Date | Number of Pages |
BSI | 2024 | 110 |
This document establishes requirements for short-range communication for the purposes of augmenting the localization in autonomous electronic fee collection (EFC) systems. Localization augmentation serves to inform on-board equipment (OBE) about geographical location and the identification of a charge object. This document specifies the provision of location and heading information and security means to protect against the manipulation of the OBE with false RSE. The localization augmentation communication (LAC) takes place between an OBE in a vehicle and fixed RSE. This document is applicable to OBE in an autonomous mode of operation. This document specifies attributes and functions for the purpose of localization augmentation, by making use of the dedicated short-range communications (DSRC) communication services provided by DSRC Layer 7, and makes these LAC attributes and functions available to the LAC applications at the RSE and the OBE. Attributes and functions are specified on the level of application data units (ADUs; see Figure 1). As depicted in Figure 1, this document is applicable to: — the application interface definition between OBE and RSE; — the interface to the DSRC application layer, as specified in ISO 15628 and EN 12834; — the use of the DSRC stack. The LAC is suitable for a range of short-range communication media. This document provides specific definitions regarding the CEN-DSRC stack as specified in EN 15509. Annexes C, D, E and H provide for the use of the Italian DSRC as specified in ETSI/ES 200 674-1, ISO CALM IR ARIB DSRC and WAVE DSRC. This document contains a protocol implementation conformance statement (PICS) proforma in Annex B and transaction examples in Annex F. Annex G highlights how to use this document for the European Electronic Toll Service (EETS). Test specifications are not within the scope of this document.
PDF Catalog
PDF Pages | PDF Title |
---|---|
66 | undefined |
68 | European foreword Endorsement notice |
71 | Foreword |
72 | Introduction |
73 | 1 Scope |
74 | 2 Normative references |
75 | 3 Terms and definitions |
76 | 4 Abbreviated terms |
77 | 5 Application interface architecture 5.1 General 5.2 Services provided |
78 | 5.3 Attributes 5.4 Contract and toll context 5.5 Use of lower layers 5.5.1 Supported DSRC communication stacks |
79 | 5.5.2 The use of the CEN DSRC stack 6 Conformance 6.1 Conformance requirements 6.2 Conformance statement 6.3 Conformance evaluation and testing 7 Functions 7.1 General 7.2 Functional requirements 7.2.1 Minimum supported transaction details |
80 | 7.2.2 Initialising communication 7.2.3 Writing of data 7.2.4 Termination of communication 7.3 Security 7.3.1 General |
81 | 7.3.2 Authentication of RSE — Access credentials 7.3.3 Authentication of LAC Data 8 Attributes 8.1 General |
82 | 8.2 Data regarding location reference |
83 | 8.3 Operational data 8.4 OBE contractual data |
84 | 8.5 Security-related data 9 Transaction model 9.1 General |
85 | 9.2 Initialisation phase 9.2.1 General structure 9.2.2 LAC application-specific contents of the BST 9.2.3 LAC application-specific contents of the VST 9.3 Transaction phase |
86 | Annex A (normative) LAC data type specifications |
87 | Annex B (normative) PICS proforma for the data elements in the attribute |
95 | Annex C (informative) ETSI/ES 200 674-1 communication stack usage for LAC applications |
98 | Annex D (informative) IR communication usage for LAC applications |
99 | Annex E (informative) ARIB DSRC communication stack usage for LAC applications |
101 | Annex F (informative) LAC transaction example |
103 | Annex G (informative) Use of this document for the EETS |
104 | Annex H (informative) Using the WAVE communication stack for LAC applications |
107 | Bibliography |