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Automotive V2X Module (DSRC / C-V2X) – Architecture & ICs

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This page is written to help you turn “we need V2X” into a concrete module choice. It walks you through architecture, RF and security requirements, timing, power and interfaces, then ends with a BOM checklist, brand mapping and FAQs so you can brief suppliers and compare options with confidence.

V2X Module in the Vehicle Architecture

V2X modules sit between roadside wireless links and the in-vehicle network, typically as a small ECU near the gateway or integrated into a connectivity or communication domain controller. They terminate DSRC or C-V2X radio links, timestamp and secure messages, then forward filtered data into gateway or ADAS domain controllers while sharing power, ignition and wake lines, GNSS or timing sources and diagnostic channels with the rest of the vehicle.

V2X module position in the vehicle network Block diagram showing a V2X module between roadside units and the in-vehicle network, connected to gateway or ADAS ECUs, telematics, GNSS/timing and power or wake lines. Automotive V2X module in the vehicle architecture Roadside units Other vehicles V2V / V2I / V2P / V2N V2X Module DSRC / C-V2X RF & PHY Baseband & Security Gateway / ADAS DC IVN processing Safety & motion logic Telematics ECU Connectivity & backend link GNSS / Timing PPS / time sync Power & wake IGN / ACC / wake pins IVN (Automotive Ethernet / CAN-FD) V2X terminates wireless safety links and injects trusted data into the IVN.

DSRC vs C-V2X – What the Module Must Support

DSRC and C-V2X share the 5.9 GHz band but drive different requirements into the V2X module. From a hardware point of view you care less about protocol clauses and more about which bands and channelizations are supported, which 3GPP or 802.11p releases the silicon targets, whether the module is DSRC-only, C-V2X-only or dual-mode, and what latency and reliability classes it can guarantee in real traffic.

DSRC vs C-V2X capabilities from a module view Comparison diagram showing DSRC and C-V2X blocks with band and channel support, 802.11p and 3GPP releases, plus a shared dual-mode module capability bar and KPI outputs. DSRC vs C-V2X – module-facing capabilities DSRC module view 5.9 GHz band Channel & region plan 802.11p OFDM DSRC PHY & MAC Module-facing KPIs Latency class, PER, range Band / channel options C-V2X module view 5.9 GHz band PC5 spectrum plan Rel-14/15 PC5 Rel-16 NR-V2X Module-facing KPIs Latency class, PDR, range Release / profile support Dual-mode V2X module capability DSRC-only · C-V2X-only · DSRC + C-V2X Latency & reliability Band & region coverage Release & mode options

RF Front-End & Transceiver Signal Chain

For V2X modules, real field performance often comes down to how the RF front end is implemented rather than which protocol logo is printed on the box. A practical RF view starts with the full receive and transmit chains from the antenna to the ADC and back to the antenna, then asks whether the module can still meet output power, EIRP, linearity, sensitivity and blocking targets across temperature, antenna mismatch and multi-radio coexistence in the vehicle.

When you review a V2X RF design or module datasheet, treat the key figures as levers: EIRP and PA linearity determine range and regulatory margins, while noise figure and blocking performance decide how well the link survives dense urban interference. T/R switching time and calibration time set how fast the module can react to safety messages after wake-up or beam steering changes, and you should check what level of ESD, surge and lightning protection is integrated at the RF connector versus left to the host PCB.

V2X RF front-end and transceiver signal chain Block-style diagram of the V2X RF receive and transmit chains from antenna through switch, LNA, mixer and ADC on receive, and DAC, driver, PA and filter on transmit, with separate protection and RF KPI summary blocks. V2X RF front-end and transceiver signal chain Receive chain (V2X in) Antenna Switch / Duplexer LNA Mixer / IF ADC I/Q samples Transmit chain (V2X out) DAC I/Q drive PA driver PA Output power Filter Mask / ACLR Antenna Protection & EMC ESD / TVS · surge · lightning Input filters and shielding strategy RF performance KPIs for V2X modules EIRP · linearity · ACLR · sensitivity · noise figure Blocking, coexistence, T/R switching and calibration time Implement with RF transceiver SoC or discrete LNA / PA / switch depending on region and performance needs.

Baseband Processing and Security Acceleration

Under the RF front end, the baseband and security complex is where V2X messages become time-stamped, decoded and either accepted or rejected before they ever reach a gateway or ADAS domain controller. A robust module must sustain OFDM or SC-FDMA waveforms, channel estimation and Turbo or LDPC coding at full channel loading while keeping a tight, deterministic latency budget from air interface to the in-vehicle network under worst-case congestion.

On top of the physical layer, MAC scheduling and resource control decide which packets are even transmitted, while hardware AES, SHA and ECC engines enforce authentication and integrity without letting crypto throughput become the bottleneck. Keys and certificates must sit in an HSM or secure element that supports secure boot, signed firmware, certificate rollover and fault logging so that security policy survives field updates and hardware replacement.

V2X baseband processing and security acceleration Block-style diagram showing V2X RF feeding a baseband core with OFDM, coding and MAC blocks, a crypto engine and HSM or secure element, and interfaces to gateway, ADAS and diagnostics over Automotive Ethernet, PCIe and SPI. V2X baseband processing and security acceleration V2X RF 5.9 GHz front end I/Q samples V2X baseband core OFDM / SC-FDMA PHY processing Turbo / LDPC Coding engine MAC & scheduler Resource · Mode 3 / 4 Crypto engine AES · SHA · ECC HSM / secure element Keys & certificates Secure storage · OTA Gateway / ADAS ECU Safety logic host Interfaces to vehicle network and diagnostics Automotive Ethernet · PCIe · SPI · UART · GPIO Baseband and security must meet latency and integrity targets, not just protocol compliance, for safety-critical V2X actions.

Timing, Synchronization & Coexistence

V2X modules do not just move packets; they attach time and trust to every safety message before handing it to the vehicle network. That makes time alignment with GNSS PPS, network or TSN time and the way timestamps are exposed to gateway or ADAS ECUs as important as RF performance. If different ECUs see different time lines, even correct V2X messages can lead to wrong decisions at an intersection or during a lane-change manoeuvre.

At the RF and antenna side, V2X must coexist with cellular, Wi-Fi and GNSS radios packed into the same shark-fin cluster. Module selection should therefore look beyond basic sensitivity and EIRP to ask which time sources are supported, how timestamp precision and holdover are specified, what coexistence filters or duplexers are integrated and which blocking, adjacent-channel and multi-antenna capabilities have been validated with real automotive radio stacks.

V2X timing, synchronization and RF coexistence Block-style diagram showing time sources feeding a V2X timing engine that timestamps messages to gateway and ADAS ECUs, with a coexistence view of cellular, Wi-Fi, GNSS and V2X antennas sharing filters and isolation on the vehicle roof. V2X timing, synchronization and RF coexistence Time alignment and timestamps Time sources GNSS PPS Network time PTP / gPTP / TSN V2X timing engine Lock, holdover and monitoring Message timestamp generation Gateway / ADAS ECUs Time-stamped V2X messages Diagnostics & time status RF coexistence on the vehicle roof Cellular 4G / 5G modem Wi-Fi / BT In-vehicle hotspot GNSS Position & time V2X radios DSRC / C-V2X Antenna cluster, filters and isolation Shared or separate antennas · SAW/BAW filters · spacing and isolation targets Use blocking, adjacent-channel and coexistence test data to qualify V2X modules in dense multi-radio antenna clusters.

Power, Thermal and Form-Factor Planning

Even a perfect RF and protocol implementation will fail in production if the V2X module cannot survive real automotive power and thermal conditions or physically fit into the chosen antenna cluster or ECU bay. From a hardware and procurement perspective, you should treat supply range, number of rails, mode-based power profiles and mounting options as hard constraints that shape which modules are realistic for your vehicle platform.

A practical review starts with the supply input and on-module regulation strategy, then maps idle, receive, transmit and peak test currents to the available power budget and wake-up behaviour of the body or gateway domain. Mechanical drawings and connector pinouts must be checked for RF keep-out regions, ground and thermal pad usage and the number of RF and high-speed digital ports, so that the module can be cooled, sealed and wired without last-minute packaging compromises or EMC surprises.

V2X module power, thermal and form-factor planning Block-style diagram showing vehicle power feeding conditioning and internal rails in a V2X module, power modes with sleep, RX and TX states, and mechanical and thermal constraints for module outline, mounting and connectors. V2X module power, thermal and form-factor planning Supply and on-module rails Vehicle power VIN range & ripple Transients & protection Power conditioning Protection · DC-DC · LDO AEC-Q qualified rails V2X module internal rails RF · baseband · IO · security Supply monitoring and diagnostics Power modes and wake-up behaviour Sleep / standby Low current Wake on IGN / bus Idle / RX monitor Channel listening Moderate current TX / peak mode PA on · highest current Duty-cycle limits Factory / test Worst-case current Thermal margin check Thermal and mechanical constraints Thermal envelope Ambient range · Tcase limits Mounting and heat-spreading Form factor, connectors and layout constraints Module outline · mounting concept · RF and high-speed ports Keep-out for RF region and ground / thermal pad usage

Functional Safety, Reliability & Regulatory

A V2X module is part of a safety-related communication chain, so it must satisfy both automotive-grade reliability and regional radio regulations before it can be used in series production. Component- and module-level qualifications such as AEC-Q100 or AEC-Q104 sit alongside ESD and EMC standards and regional spectrum approvals, and a buyer should treat these as hard entry criteria rather than nice-to-have badges printed on the datasheet.

Beyond pure paperwork, the module must also contribute to the overall functional safety concept by exposing health status, link-quality metrics and self-test results to gateway or ADAS ECUs. That includes monitoring supply, clock and RF paths, flagging degraded performance and providing a clear diagnostic path so that higher-level safety software can take action without having to guess whether communication failures are local to the V2X module or caused by the network or environment.

V2X functional safety, reliability and regulatory view Block diagram showing automotive qualification, EMC and ESD compliance and regional radio approvals feeding into a V2X module, which exposes functional safety and diagnostic hooks to gateway and ADAS ECUs. V2X functional safety, reliability and regulatory Automotive qualification and EMC/ESD Automotive grade AEC-Q100 / Q104 / Q200 IC and module-level Lifetime and stress tests EMC and ESD CISPR 25 · ISO 11452 ISO 10605 ESD Radio approvals FCC · CE/RED · KC · TELEC SRRC · ANATEL · others V2X module Automotive-qualified silicon and RF front-end Certified RF output and emissions for 5.9 GHz V2X bands Functional safety and diagnostics hooks Safety-related monitoring Power, clock and RF health · link quality (RSSI, PER, disconnects) Self-test results and diagnostic codes sent to gateway / ADAS ECUs

System Interfaces to Gateway / ADAS ECUs

From a system architecture perspective, the V2X module is another node on the in-vehicle network, but one with tight latency and security expectations. Interface planning therefore has to go beyond “one Ethernet port” and describe how V2X data, control, diagnostics and firmware updates are routed between gateway and ADAS ECUs, and which pins or buses are responsible for power states and safety-related fault signalling.

In practice, many designs combine 100/1000BASE-T1 Automotive Ethernet for payload data with CAN-FD or SPI/UART for control and logging, plus dedicated reset, boot and mode pins for manufacturing and field updates. The software view must also be clear: whether the module presents a modem-like command interface or runs a full V2X stack that exposes sockets or APIs, and what this implies for CPU load, bandwidth and latency budgets in the host ECUs.

V2X system interfaces to gateway and ADAS ECUs Block diagram with a V2X module in the center connected to gateway and ADAS ECUs over Ethernet, CAN-FD and SPI/UART, plus control, fault and debug signals for power modes and diagnostics. V2X system interfaces to gateway and ADAS ECUs Gateway / body ECU Network routing & diagnostics Power and wake control ADAS / safety ECU V2X decision logic Latency-critical messages V2X module DSRC / C-V2X radio, baseband and security Data, control and diagnostic interfaces Data interfaces 100/1000BASE-T1 Ethernet · CAN-FD · SPI / UART Control, fault and debug signals Control pins Reset · boot mode · sleep / wake Factory / test configuration Fault and status outputs Interrupt and fault GPIOs Status frames on CAN-FD / Ethernet Debug and logging UART / SPI debug ports Firmware update and trace Define data, control, fault and debug paths early to avoid late E/E architecture changes.

BOM & Procurement Checklist for V2X Modules

This section helps you turn your V2X technical requirements into a structured inquiry form that you can drop straight into an RFQ or supplier comparison sheet. Every field maps to a design decision that affects qualification, performance, life-cycle and system integration, so you are not just asking for “a V2X modem” but for a module that really fits your platform.

As you go through the checklist, you can ask each supplier to give clear values, and to state whether they are typical figures, guaranteed limits or tied to specific regional SKUs. You can also reuse this same structure across multiple projects so your team has one common template when you benchmark different V2X module options.

❶ Basic Mode & Integration Level

❷ Frequency Band & Regional Certification

❸ System & Network Interfaces

❹ Security & Certificate Management

❺ Power, Consumption & Wake-Up Profile

❻ Environment, Reliability & Certifications

❼ Mechanical, Connector & Layout Constraints

❽ Supply Strategy & Life-Cycle Policy


All parameters above can be directly copied into an RFQ form or internal specification sheet to compare multiple V2X module suppliers on equal terms.

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FAQs × 12 (V2X Module Planning & Selection)

These twelve questions turn V2X module planning into concrete decisions you can put into RFQs, design reviews and supplier calls. Each answer stays short and practical so you can reuse it as a search snippet, an internal checklist or a reminder when you compare multiple V2X module options for the same vehicle platform.

How should I choose between DSRC, C-V2X and dual-mode V2X modules?
The choice between DSRC, C-V2X and dual-mode is mainly about where your vehicles will run and how long the platform must live. If your key markets or fleet customers are already committed to C-V2X, it rarely makes sense to design for DSRC only. Dual-mode can de-risk regional differences but adds cost, complexity and certification effort.
What do Rel-14, Rel-15 and NR-V2X releases mean for my V2X module hardware?
The different releases mainly affect bandwidth, scheduling features and how demanding the baseband processing and host interfaces become. Rel-14 and Rel-15 C-V2X will often run on today’s modules. NR-V2X typically needs more compute and higher throughput on Ethernet or PCIe. Ask suppliers which releases are supported now and what is planned by firmware upgrade.
Which RF datasheet parameters matter most when selecting a V2X module?
When you compare V2X modules, focus on transmit power or EIRP, receive sensitivity and blocking or adjacent channel performance rather than only peak data rate. EIRP and sensitivity tell you what range is realistic. Blocking, in-band interference and coexistence test data reflect how the module behaves in real traffic with strong cellular, Wi-Fi and other radios nearby.
How can I tell whether a V2X module’s security features meet my project needs?
Start by checking whether the module has an automotive grade hardware security module or secure element and which AES, SHA and ECC algorithms it supports. Then confirm where keys and certificates are stored, how they are updated and whether firmware images are signed and checked at boot. Finally, make sure security events can be reported back to your ECUs.
Should I connect a V2X module to my ECUs over CAN-FD or Automotive Ethernet?
Use CAN-FD when you mainly need configuration, status and diagnostic access and the V2X message load is modest. Automotive Ethernet makes more sense when you expect heavy V2V and V2I traffic, tight latency budgets or need to share data with multiple ECUs. Many designs combine both, with data on Ethernet and control and health reporting on CAN-FD.
Is it better to use an integrated V2X plus GNSS module or separate devices?
An integrated V2X plus GNSS module simplifies routing, timing and certification because one supplier owns the whole radio and time chain. Separate V2X and GNSS devices give you more freedom to reuse existing modules and change vendors but require careful design of PPS routing, coexistence and antenna placement. Your installed base and reuse goals normally decide.
How do I reserve enough performance margin for V2X in a multi-radio shark-fin antenna?
To protect V2X performance in a multi-radio shark-fin, you need both isolation and proof. Ask for recommended antenna layouts, isolation targets and any coexistence test reports with typical 4G or 5G and Wi-Fi combinations. Check the RF front end design, filters and blocking specs and avoid packing V2X into the noisiest corner of the antenna cluster.
How should I plan V2X module wake-up and power budgets for vehicle sleep modes?
Start by defining how much current your parked vehicle can afford in each sleep or standby mode, then map the module’s sleep, idle, receive and transmit currents onto that budget. Decide which signals are allowed to wake the module and how fast it must be ready to send safety messages. Capture these requirements as explicit RFQ parameters.
How can I check the automotive grade and regional certification coverage of a V2X module?
You should expect a structured certificate list rather than just a marketing claim. Ask for automotive qualification information such as AEC-Q100 or AEC-Q104, EMC and ESD references like CISPR 25, ISO 11452 and ISO 10605 and regional radio approvals such as FCC, CE, KC, TELEC, SRRC and ANATEL. Also check which markets are still pending certification.
Which failure scenarios should I focus on when road-testing and validating V2X modules and OTA updates?
Focus on dense urban or highway traffic with many transmitting vehicles, strong cellular and Wi-Fi interference, weak GNSS coverage and tunnels. For OTA, deliberately interrupt power or radio coverage and check how the module rolls back or resumes again. Combine RF logging, protocol traces and ECU diagnostics so you can separate module issues from network or environment problems.
What should I reserve in my hardware if I may migrate from DSRC to C-V2X later?
If you might migrate from DSRC to C-V2X, protect yourself by using standard connectors and keeping enough board space and thermal margin for a future module. Plan Ethernet or PCIe bandwidth for higher traffic and avoid baking DSRC only assumptions into antennas and filters. Ask suppliers about pin-compatible or follow-on C-V2X module families when you start.
Which three easily overlooked parameters can create the biggest delivery risk in V2X module RFQs?
The biggest hidden risks are often life cycle, certification status and worst case power or thermal numbers. You want clear statements on minimum supply years and PCN policy, a list of which regions are already certified and current and temperature limits under peak traffic or factory modes. If any of these are vague, your project timing is exposed.