Litcius/Paper detail

Making the Case for Centralized Automotive E/E Architectures

Victor Bandur, Gehan Selim, Vera Pantelic, Mark Lawford

2021IEEE Transactions on Vehicular Technology170 citationsDOI

Abstract

The rapidly increasing complexity of software in modern cars dictates new trends in electrical and/or electronic (E/E) automotive architectures. As a result, many original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) and suppliers have been advocating centralized E/E architectures as the automotive architectures of the future. In this article we make the case for centralized E/E architectures in the automotive industry. We discuss the motivation for centralized architectural schemes by carefully examining challenges and drawbacks of the traditional decentralized automotive E/E architectures, while contrasting with the corresponding benefits offered by centralization. Then, the technologies required to support new centralized architectures are discussed in detail. In particular, we present the state of the art in networking technologies, virtualization, electronic control unit (ECU) hardware and AUTOSAR, and discuss the state of adoption of these technologies in industry. Throughout, functional safety is considered and addressed as an overarching concern in the automotive industry.

Topics & Concepts

Automotive industryAUTOSAROriginal equipment manufacturerElectronic control unitAutomotive electronicsArchitectureEngineeringVirtualizationManufacturing engineeringSoftwareComputer scienceEmbedded systemSystems engineeringAutomotive engineeringOperating systemCloud computingVisual artsAerospace engineeringArtReal-Time Systems SchedulingEmbedded Systems Design TechniquesInterconnection Networks and Systems