TY - JOUR
T1 - Blockchain Technology for Intelligent Transportation Systems
T2 - A Systematic Literature Review
AU - Jabbar, Rateb
AU - Dhib, Eya
AU - Said, Ahmed Ben
AU - Krichen, Moez
AU - Fetais, Noora
AU - Zaidan, Esmat
AU - Barkaoui, Kamel
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2013 IEEE.
PY - 2022/2/7
Y1 - 2022/2/7
N2 - The use of Blockchain technology has recently become widespread. It has emerged as an essential tool in various academic and industrial fields, such as healthcare, transportation, finance, cybersecurity, and supply chain management. It is regarded as a decentralized, trustworthy, secure, transparent, and immutable solution that innovates data sharing and management. This survey aims to provide a systematic review of Blockchain application to intelligent transportation systems in general and the Internet of Vehicles (IoV) in particular. The survey is divided into four main parts. First, the Blockchain technology including its opportunities, relative taxonomies, and applications is introduced; basic cryptography is also discussed. Next, the evolution of Blockchain is presented, starting from the primary phase of pre-Bitcoin (fundamentally characterized by classic cryptography systems), followed by the Blockchain 1.0 phase, (characterized by Bitcoin implementation and common consensus protocols), and finally, the Blockchain 2.0 phase (characterized by the implementation of smart contracts, Ethereum, and Hyperledger). We compared and identified the strengths and limitations of each of these implementations. Then, the state of the art of Blockchain-based IoV solutions (BIoV) is explored by referring to a large and trusted source database from the Scopus data bank. For a well-structured and clear discussion, the reviewed literature is classified according to the research direction and implemented IoV layer. Useful tables, statistics, and analysis are also presented. Finally, the open problems and future directions in BIoV research are summarized.
AB - The use of Blockchain technology has recently become widespread. It has emerged as an essential tool in various academic and industrial fields, such as healthcare, transportation, finance, cybersecurity, and supply chain management. It is regarded as a decentralized, trustworthy, secure, transparent, and immutable solution that innovates data sharing and management. This survey aims to provide a systematic review of Blockchain application to intelligent transportation systems in general and the Internet of Vehicles (IoV) in particular. The survey is divided into four main parts. First, the Blockchain technology including its opportunities, relative taxonomies, and applications is introduced; basic cryptography is also discussed. Next, the evolution of Blockchain is presented, starting from the primary phase of pre-Bitcoin (fundamentally characterized by classic cryptography systems), followed by the Blockchain 1.0 phase, (characterized by Bitcoin implementation and common consensus protocols), and finally, the Blockchain 2.0 phase (characterized by the implementation of smart contracts, Ethereum, and Hyperledger). We compared and identified the strengths and limitations of each of these implementations. Then, the state of the art of Blockchain-based IoV solutions (BIoV) is explored by referring to a large and trusted source database from the Scopus data bank. For a well-structured and clear discussion, the reviewed literature is classified according to the research direction and implemented IoV layer. Useful tables, statistics, and analysis are also presented. Finally, the open problems and future directions in BIoV research are summarized.
KW - Automotive communication
KW - Bitcoin
KW - Blockchain
KW - Blockchains
KW - Computer architecture
KW - Distributed ledger
KW - Ethereum
KW - Intelligent transport system
KW - Internet of Things
KW - Internet of vehicles
KW - Privacy
KW - Security
KW - Smart contract
KW - Taxonomy
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85124709287
U2 - 10.1109/ACCESS.2022.3149958
DO - 10.1109/ACCESS.2022.3149958
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:85124709287
SN - 2169-3536
VL - 10
SP - 20995
EP - 21031
JO - IEEE Access
JF - IEEE Access
ER -