114 research outputs found

    Characterization of aggregate received power from power beacons in millimeter wave ad hoc networks

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    Wireless power transfer (WPT) has emerged as an attractive solution to power future wireless communication networks. In this paper, we consider WPT using power beacons (PBs) for a millimeter wave (mmWave) wireless ad hoc network. Using stochastic geometry, we derive the moment generating function (MGF) and the nth cumulant of the aggregate received power from PBs at a reference receiver in closed-form. The MGF allows the complementary cumulative distribution function (CCDF) of the aggregate received power from PBs to be numerically evaluated. We also compare different closed-form distributions which can be used to approximate the CCDF of the aggregate received power. Our results show that the lognormal distribution provides the best CCDF approximation compared to other distributions considered in the literature. The results also show that under practical setups, it is feasible to power users in a mmWave ad hoc network using PBs.ARC Discovery Projects Grant DP14010113

    Interference and Deployment Issues for Cognitive Radio Systems in Shadowing Environments

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    In this paper we describe a model for calculating the aggregate interference encountered by primary receivers in the presence of randomly placed cognitive radios (CRs). We show that incorporating the impact of distance attenuation and lognormal fading on each constituent interferer in the aggregate, leads to a composite interference that cannot be satisfactorily modeled by a lognormal. Using the interference statistics we determine a number of key parameters needed for the deployment of CRs. Examples of these are the exclusion zone radius, needed to protect the primary receiver under different types of fading environments and acceptable interference levels, and the numbers of CRs that can be deployed. We further show that if the CRs have apriori knowledge of the radio environment map (REM), then a much larger number of CRs can be deployed especially in a high density environment. Given REM information, we also look at the CR numbers achieved by two different types of techniques to process the scheduling information.Comment: to be presented at IEEE ICC 2009. This posting is the same as the original one. Only author's list is updated that was unfortunately not correctly mentioned in first versio

    Integrating Drones and Wireless Power Transfer into Beyond 5G Networks

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    As fifth generation (5G) standards have been established and 5G commercial products are just around the corner, both academia and industry have started to look at requirements for beyond 5G networks. Network flexibility and long battery life are among the key requirements for beyond 5G wireless communication systems. These critical requirements, which have not been sufficiently addressed in the previous generations, are the focus of this thesis. The first half of this thesis explores two important use cases of drones to provide flexible communication networks. First, the performance of a cellular network with underlay drone cell for temporary events inside a stadium is studied. Using stochastic geometry, a general analytical framework is proposed to analyze the uplink and the downlink coverage probabilities for both the aerial and the terrestrial systems. Our results show that for urban environment and dense urban environment, the drone is best deployed at a low height (e.g., 200 m or lower), regardless of the distance between the center of the stadium and the terrestrial base station. However, for suburban environment and high-rise urban environment, the best drone altitude varies. Second, the performance of emergency information dissemination in public safety scenarios using drone is studied. A drone-assisted multihop multicast device-to-device (D2D) network is considered, where an emergency alert message broadcasted by a drone at the first time slot is multicasted by the D2D users that have successfully received the message through multihop. The impact of different system parameters on the link and the network performance is investigated. Our results demonstrate that a higher drone altitude provides better link and network coverage probabilities and lower mean local delay. Under practical setups, the cell edge user located 2 km from the ground projection of the drone has a link coverage probability around 90% after 5 time slots and a mean local delay of 2.32 time slots with a drone height as low as 200 m. The second half of this thesis investigates wireless power transfer networks. Specifically, the use of power beacons in a millimeter wave wireless ad hoc network is considered, where transmitters adopt the harvest-then-transmit protocol. First, the characteristic of the aggregate received power from power beacons is analyzed and the lognormal distribution is found to provide the best complementary cumulative distribution function approximation compared to other distributions considered in the literature. Then, a tractable model with discrete transmit power for each transmitter is proposed to compute the channel coverage probability and the total coverage probability. Our results show that our model provides a good accuracy and reveal the impact of different system parameters on the total coverage probability. Our results also illustrate that under practical setups, for power beacon transmit power of 50 dBm and transmitters with maximum transmit power between 20 - 40 dBm, which are safe for human exposure, the total coverage probability is around 90%. Thus, it is feasible and safe to power transmitters in a millimeter wave ad hoc network using power beacons

    Modeling and Analysis of Cellular Networks Using Stochastic Geometry: A Tutorial

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    This paper presents a tutorial on stochastic geometry (SG)-based analysis for cellular networks. This tutorial is distinguished by its depth with respect to wireless communication details and its focus on cellular networks. This paper starts by modeling and analyzing the baseband interference in a baseline single-tier downlink cellular network with single antenna base stations and universal frequency reuse. Then, it characterizes signal-to-interference-plus-noise-ratio and its related performance metrics. In particular, a unified approach to conduct error probability, outage probability, and transmission rate analysis is presented. Although the main focus of this paper is on cellular networks, the presented unified approach applies for other types of wireless networks that impose interference protection around receivers. This paper then extends the unified approach to capture cellular network characteristics (e.g., frequency reuse, multiple antenna, power control, etc.). It also presents numerical examples associated with demonstrations and discussions. To this end, this paper highlights the state-of-the-art research and points out future research directions

    Secrecy Outage Analysis of <i>k</i>-th Best Link in Random Wireless Networks

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    Interference modelling and management for cognitive radio networks

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    Radio spectrum is becoming increasingly scarce as more and more devices go wireless. Meanwhile, studies indicate that the assigned spectrum is not fully utilised. Cognitive radio (CR) technology is envisioned to be a promising solution to address the imbalance between spectrum scarcity and spectrum underutilisation. It improves the spectrum utilisation by reusing the unused or underutilised spectrum owned by incumbent systems (primary systems). With the introduction of CR networks, two types of interference originating from CR networks are introduced. They are the interference from CR to primary networks (CR-primary interference) and the interference among spectrum-sharing CR nodes (CR-CR interference). The interference should be well controlled and managed in order not to jeopardise the operation of the primary network and to improve the performance of CR systems. This thesis investigates the interference in CR networks by modelling and mitigating the CR-primary interference and analysing the CR-CR interference channels. Firstly, the CR-primary interference is modelled for multiple CR nodes sharing the spectrum with the primary system. The probability density functions of CR-primary interference are derived for CR networks adopting different interference management schemes. The relationship between CR operating parameters and the resulting CRprimary interference is investigated. It sheds light on the deployment of CR networks to better protect the primary system. Secondly, various interference mitigation techniques that are applicable to CR networks are reviewed. Two novel precoding schemes for CR multiple-input multipleoutput (MIMO) systems are proposed to mitigate the CR-primary interference and maximise the CR throughput. To further reduce the CR-primary interference, we also approach interference mitigation from a cross-layer perspective by jointly considering channel allocation in the media access control layer and precoding in the physical layer of CR MIMO systems. Finally, we analyse the underlying interference channels among spectrum-sharing CR users when they interfere with each other. The Pareto rate region for multi-user MIMO interference systems is characterised. Various rate region convexification schemes are examined to convexify the rate region. Then, game theory is applied to the interference system to coordinate the operation of each CR user. Nash bargaining over MIMO interference systems is characterised as well. The research presented in this thesis reveals the impact of CR operation on the resulting CR-primary network, how to mitigate the CR-primary interference and how to coordinate the spectrum-sharing CR users. It forms the fundamental basis for interference management in CR systems and consequently gives insights into the design and deployment of CR networks

    On the Performance of mmWave Networks aided by Wirelessly Powered Relays

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