266 research outputs found

    Energy Harvesting Wireless Communications: A Review of Recent Advances

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    This article summarizes recent contributions in the broad area of energy harvesting wireless communications. In particular, we provide the current state of the art for wireless networks composed of energy harvesting nodes, starting from the information-theoretic performance limits to transmission scheduling policies and resource allocation, medium access and networking issues. The emerging related area of energy transfer for self-sustaining energy harvesting wireless networks is considered in detail covering both energy cooperation aspects and simultaneous energy and information transfer. Various potential models with energy harvesting nodes at different network scales are reviewed as well as models for energy consumption at the nodes.Comment: To appear in the IEEE Journal of Selected Areas in Communications (Special Issue: Wireless Communications Powered by Energy Harvesting and Wireless Energy Transfer

    Self-Evaluation Applied Mathematics 2003-2008 University of Twente

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    This report contains the self-study for the research assessment of the Department of Applied Mathematics (AM) of the Faculty of Electrical Engineering, Mathematics and Computer Science (EEMCS) at the University of Twente (UT). The report provides the information for the Research Assessment Committee for Applied Mathematics, dealing with mathematical sciences at the three universities of technology in the Netherlands. It describes the state of affairs pertaining to the period 1 January 2003 to 31 December 2008

    Signal Processing and Learning for Next Generation Multiple Access in 6G

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    Wireless communication systems to date primarily rely on the orthogonality of resources to facilitate the design and implementation, from user access to data transmission. Emerging applications and scenarios in the sixth generation (6G) wireless systems will require massive connectivity and transmission of a deluge of data, which calls for more flexibility in the design concept that goes beyond orthogonality. Furthermore, recent advances in signal processing and learning have attracted considerable attention, as they provide promising approaches to various complex and previously intractable problems of signal processing in many fields. This article provides an overview of research efforts to date in the field of signal processing and learning for next-generation multiple access, with an emphasis on massive random access and non-orthogonal multiple access. The promising interplay with new technologies and the challenges in learning-based NGMA are discussed

    Implementação e avaliação no system generator de um sistema cooperativo para os futuros sistemas 5G

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    With the arrival of 5G it is expected the proliferation of services in the different fields such as healthcare, utility applications, industrial automation, 4K streaming, that the former networks can not provide. Additionally, the total number of wireless communication devices will escalate in such a manner that the already scarce available frequency bandwidth won’t be enough to pack the intended objectives. Cisco’s Annual Internet Report from 2018 predicts that by 2023 there will be nearly 30 billion devices capable of wireless communication. Due to the exponential expiation of both services and devices, the challenges upon both network data capacity and efficient radio resourse use will be greater than ever, thus the urgency for solutions is grand. Both the capacity for wireless communications and spectral efficiency are related to cell size and its users proximity to the access point. Thus, shortening the distance between the transmitter and the receiver improves both aspects of the network. This concept is what motivates the implementation of heterogeneous networks, HetNets, that are composed of many different small-cells, SCs, overlaid across the same coexisting area of a conventional macro-cell, shortening the distance between the cell users and its access point transceivers, granting a better coverage and higher data rates. However, the HetNets potential does not come without any challenges, as these networks suffer considerably from communication interference between cells. Although some interference management algorithms that allow coexistence between cells have been proposed in recent years, most of them were evaluated by software simulations and not implemented in real-time platforms. Therefore, this master thesis aims to give the first step on the implementation and evaluation of an interference mitigation technique in hardware. Specifically, it is assumed a downlink scenario composed by a macro-cell base station, a macro-cell primary user and a small cell user, with the aim of implementing an algorithm that eliminates the downlink interference that the base station may cause to the secondary users. The study was carried out using the System Generator DSP tool, which is a tool that generates code for hardware from schematics created in it. This tool also offers a wide range of blocks that help the creation, and fundamentally, the simulation and study of the system to be implemented, before being translated into hardware. The results obtained in this work are a faithful representation of the behavior of the implemented system, which can be used for a future application for FPGA.Com a chegada do 5G, espera-se a proliferação de serviços nas mais diversas áreas tal como assistência médica, automação industrial, transmissão em 4k, que não eram possíveis nas redes das gerações anteriores. Além deste fenómeno, o número total de dispositivos capazes de conexões wireless aumentará de tal maneira que a escassa largura de banda disponível não será suficiente para abranger os objetivos pretendidos. O Relatório Anual de 2018 sobre a Internet da Cisco prevê que até 2023 haverá quase 30 bilhões de dispositivos capazes de comunicação sem fio. Devido ao aumento exponencial de serviços e dispositivos, os desafios sobre a capacidade de dados da rede e o udo eficiente dos recursos de rádio serão maiores que nunca. Por estes motivos, a necessidade de soluções para estas lacunas é enorme. Tanto a capacidade da rede e o uso eficiente do espectro de frequências estão relacionados ao tamanho da célula e à proximidade dos usuários com o ponto de acesso da célula. Ao encurtar a distância entre o transmissor e o recetor ocorre um melhoramento destes dois aspetos da rede. Este é o principal conceito na implementação de redes heterogéneas, HetNets, que são compostas por diversas células pequenas que coexistem na área de uma macro célula convencional, diminuído a distância entre os utilizadores da célula e os pontos de acesso, garantindo uma melhor cobertura e taxa de dados mais elevadas. No entanto, o potencial das HatNets não vem sem nenhum custo, pois estas redes sofrem consideravelmente de interferência entre as células. Embora nos últimos anos foram propostos alguns algoritmos que permitem a coexistência das células, a maioria destes foi só testado em simulações de software e não em plataformas em tempo real. Por esse motivo, esta dissertação de mestrado visa dar o primeiro passo na implementação e a avaliação de uma técnica de mitigação de interferência em hardware. Mais especificamente no cenário de downlink entre uma estação base de uma macro célula, um utilizador primário da macro célula e um utilizador secundário de uma célula pequena, com o principal objetivo de cancelar a interferência que a estação base possa fazer ao utilizador secundário. O estudo foi realizado utilizando a ferramenta System Generator DSP, que é uma ferramenta que gera código para hardware a partir de esquemáticos criados na mesma. Esta ferramenta também oferece uma vasta gama de blocos que ajudam a criação, e fundamentalmente, a simulação e o estudo do sistema a implementar antes de ser traduzido para hardware. Os resultados obtidos neste trabalho são uma fiel representação do comportamento do sistema implementado. O quais podem ser utilizados para uma futura aplicação para FPGA.Mestrado em Engenharia Eletrónica e Telecomunicaçõe

    Self-concatenated coding for wireless communication systems

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    In this thesis, we have explored self-concatenated coding schemes that are designed for transmission over Additive White Gaussian Noise (AWGN) and uncorrelated Rayleigh fading channels. We designed both the symbol-based Self-ConcatenatedCodes considered using Trellis Coded Modulation (SECTCM) and bit-based Self- Concatenated Convolutional Codes (SECCC) using a Recursive Systematic Convolutional (RSC) encoder as constituent codes, respectively. The design of these codes was carried out with the aid of Extrinsic Information Transfer (EXIT) charts. The EXIT chart based design has been found an efficient tool in finding the decoding convergence threshold of the constituent codes. Additionally, in order to recover the information loss imposed by employing binary rather than non-binary schemes, a soft decision demapper was introduced in order to exchange extrinsic information withthe SECCC decoder. To analyse this information exchange 3D-EXIT chart analysis was invoked for visualizing the extrinsic information exchange between the proposed Iteratively Decoding aided SECCC and soft-decision demapper (SECCC-ID). Some of the proposed SECTCM, SECCC and SECCC-ID schemes perform within about 1 dB from the AWGN and Rayleigh fading channels’ capacity. A union bound analysis of SECCC codes was carried out to find the corresponding Bit Error Ratio (BER) floors. The union bound of SECCCs was derived for communications over both AWGN and uncorrelated Rayleigh fading channels, based on a novel interleaver concept.Application of SECCCs in both UltraWideBand (UWB) and state-of-the-art video-telephone schemes demonstrated its practical benefits.In order to further exploit the benefits of the low complexity design offered by SECCCs we explored their application in a distributed coding scheme designed for cooperative communications, where iterative detection is employed by exchanging extrinsic information between the decoders of SECCC and RSC at the destination. In the first transmission period of cooperation, the relay receives the potentially erroneous data and attempts to recover the information. The recovered information is then re-encoded at the relay using an RSC encoder. In the second transmission period this information is then retransmitted to the destination. The resultant symbols transmitted from the source and relay nodes can be viewed as the coded symbols of a three-component parallel-concatenated encoder. At the destination a Distributed Binary Self-Concatenated Coding scheme using Iterative Decoding (DSECCC-ID) was employed, where the two decoders (SECCC and RSC) exchange their extrinsic information. It was shown that the DSECCC-ID is a low-complexity scheme, yet capable of approaching the Discrete-input Continuous-output Memoryless Channels’s (DCMC) capacity.Finally, we considered coding schemes designed for two nodes communicating with each other with the aid of a relay node, where the relay receives information from the two nodes in the first transmission period. At the relay node we combine a powerful Superposition Coding (SPC) scheme with SECCC. It is assumed that decoding errors may be encountered at the relay node. The relay node then broadcasts this information in the second transmission period after re-encoding it, again, using a SECCC encoder. At the destination, the amalgamated block of Successive Interference Cancellation (SIC) scheme combined with SECCC then detects and decodes the signal either with or without the aid of a priori information. Our simulation results demonstrate that the proposed scheme is capable of reliably operating at a low BER for transmission over both AWGN and uncorrelated Rayleigh fading channels. We compare the proposed scheme’s performance to a direct transmission link between the two sources having the same throughput

    L'intertextualité dans les publications scientifiques

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    La base de données bibliographiques de l'IEEE contient un certain nombre de duplications avérées avec indication des originaux copiés. Ce corpus est utilisé pour tester une méthode d'attribution d'auteur. La combinaison de la distance intertextuelle avec la fenêtre glissante et diverses techniques de classification permet d'identifier ces duplications avec un risque d'erreur très faible. Cette expérience montre également que plusieurs facteurs brouillent l'identité de l'auteur scientifique, notamment des collectifs de chercheurs à géométrie variable et une forte dose d'intertextualité acceptée voire recherchée

    Criteri distribuiti di allocazione delle risorse nelle reti wireless ad hoc

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