1,189 research outputs found
Robust Power and Subcarrier Allocation for OFDM-based Cognitive Radio Networks Considering Spectrum Sensing Uncertainties
‎In this paper‎, ‎we address power and subcarrier allocation for cooperative cognitive radio (CR) networks in the presence of spectrum sensing errors‎. ‎First‎, ‎we derive the mutual interference of primary and secondary networks affecting each other by taking into account spectrum sensing errors‎. ‎Then‎, ‎taking into account the interference constraint imposed by the cognitive network to the primary user and the power budget constraint of cognitive network‎, ‎we maximize the achievable data rates of secondary users‎. ‎Besides‎, ‎in a multi secondary user scenario‎, ‎we propose a suboptimal but low complexity power and subcarrier allocation algorithm to solve the formulated optimization problem‎. ‎Our numerical results indicate that the proposed power loading scheme increases the cognitive achievable data rates compared to classical power loading algorithms that do not consider spectrum sensing errors‎
Resource allocation and optimization techniques in wireless relay networks
Relay techniques have the potential to enhance capacity and coverage of a wireless network. Due to rapidly increasing number of smart phone subscribers and high demand for data intensive multimedia applications, the
useful radio spectrum is becoming a scarce resource. For this reason, two way relay network and cognitive radio technologies are required for better utilization of radio spectrum. Compared to the conventional one way relay
network, both the uplink and the downlink can be served simultaneously using a two way relay network. Hence the effective bandwidth efficiency is considered to be one time slot per transmission. Cognitive networks are wireless networks that consist of different types of users, a primary user (PU, the primary license holder of a spectrum band) and secondary users (SU, cognitive radios that opportunistically access the PU spectrum). The
secondary users can access the spectrum of the licensed user provided they do not harmfully affect to the primary user. In this thesis, various resource
allocation and optimization techniques have been investigated for wireless relay and cognitive radio networks
Joint Spectrum Sensing and Resource Allocation for OFDM-based Transmission with a Cognitive Relay
In this paper, we investigate the joint spectrum sensing and resource
allocation problem to maximize throughput capacity of an OFDM-based cognitive
radio link with a cognitive relay. By applying a cognitive relay that uses
decode and forward (D&F), we achieve more reliable communications, generating
less interference (by needing less transmit power) and more diversity gain. In
order to account for imperfections in spectrum sensing, the proposed schemes
jointly modify energy detector thresholds and allocates transmit powers to all
cognitive radio (CR) subcarriers, while simultaneously assigning subcarrier
pairs for secondary users (SU) and the cognitive relay. This problem is cast as
a constrained optimization problem with constraints on (1) interference
introduced by the SU and the cognitive relay to the PUs; (2) miss-detection and
false alarm probabilities and (3) subcarrier pairing for transmission on the SU
transmitter and the cognitive relay and (4) minimum Quality of Service (QoS)
for each CR subcarrier. We propose one optimal and two sub-optimal schemes all
of which are compared to other schemes in the literature. Simulation results
show that the proposed schemes achieve significantly higher throughput than
other schemes in the literature for different relay situations.Comment: EAI Endorsed Transactions on Wireless Spectrum 14(1): e4 Published
13th Apr 201
Power Allocation for Adaptive OFDM Index Modulation in Cooperative Networks
In this paper, we propose a power allocation strategy for the adaptive
orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing (OFDM) index modulation (IM) in
cooperative networks. The allocation strategy is based on the
Karush-Kuhn-Tucker (KKT) conditions, and aims at maximizing the average network
capacity according to the instantaneous channel state information (CSI). As the
transmit power at source and relay is constrained separately, we can thus
formulate an optimization problem by allocating power to active subcarriers.
Compared to the conventional uniform power allocation strategy, the proposed
dynamic strategy can lead to a higher average network capacity, especially in
the low signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) region. The analysis is also verified by
numerical results produced by Monte Carlo simulations. By applying the proposed
power allocation strategy, the efficiency of adaptive OFDM IM can be enhanced
in practice, which paves the way for its implementation in the future,
especially for cell-edge communications
- …