3,390 research outputs found
A Sensing Error Aware MAC Protocol for Cognitive Radio Networks
Cognitive radios (CR) are intelligent radio devices that can sense the radio
environment and adapt to changes in the radio environment. Spectrum sensing and
spectrum access are the two key CR functions. In this paper, we present a
spectrum sensing error aware MAC protocol for a CR network collocated with
multiple primary networks. We explicitly consider both types of sensing errors
in the CR MAC design, since such errors are inevitable for practical spectrum
sensors and more important, such errors could have significant impact on the
performance of the CR MAC protocol. Two spectrum sensing polices are presented,
with which secondary users collaboratively sense the licensed channels. The
sensing policies are then incorporated into p-Persistent CSMA to coordinate
opportunistic spectrum access for CR network users. We present an analysis of
the interference and throughput performance of the proposed CR MAC, and find
the analysis highly accurate in our simulation studies. The proposed sensing
error aware CR MAC protocol outperforms two existing approaches with
considerable margins in our simulations, which justify the importance of
considering spectrum sensing errors in CR MAC design.Comment: 21 page, technical repor
Joint Channel Assignment and Opportunistic Routing for Maximizing Throughput in Cognitive Radio Networks
In this paper, we consider the joint opportunistic routing and channel
assignment problem in multi-channel multi-radio (MCMR) cognitive radio networks
(CRNs) for improving aggregate throughput of the secondary users. We first
present the nonlinear programming optimization model for this joint problem,
taking into account the feature of CRNs-channel uncertainty. Then considering
the queue state of a node, we propose a new scheme to select proper forwarding
candidates for opportunistic routing. Furthermore, a new algorithm for
calculating the forwarding probability of any packet at a node is proposed,
which is used to calculate how many packets a forwarder should send, so that
the duplicate transmission can be reduced compared with MAC-independent
opportunistic routing & encoding (MORE) [11]. Our numerical results show that
the proposed scheme performs significantly better that traditional routing and
opportunistic routing in which channel assignment strategy is employed.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, to appear in Proc. of IEEE GlobeCom 201
Optimal time sharing in underlay cognitive radio systems with RF energy harvesting
Due to the fundamental tradeoffs, achieving spectrum efficiency and energy
efficiency are two contending design challenges for the future wireless
networks. However, applying radio-frequency (RF) energy harvesting (EH) in a
cognitive radio system could potentially circumvent this tradeoff, resulting in
a secondary system with limitless power supply and meaningful achievable
information rates. This paper proposes an online solution for the optimal time
allocation (time sharing) between the EH phase and the information transmission
(IT) phase in an underlay cognitive radio system, which harvests the RF energy
originating from the primary system. The proposed online solution maximizes the
average achievable rate of the cognitive radio system, subject to the
-percentile protection criteria for the primary system. The
optimal time sharing achieves significant gains compared to equal time
allocation between the EH and IT phases.Comment: Proceedings of the 2015 IEEE International Conference on
Communications (IEEE ICC 2015), 8-12 June 2015, London, U
On Myopic Sensing for Multi-Channel Opportunistic Access: Structure, Optimality, and Performance
We consider a multi-channel opportunistic communication system where the
states of these channels evolve as independent and statistically identical
Markov chains (the Gilbert-Elliot channel model). A user chooses one channel to
sense and access in each slot and collects a reward determined by the state of
the chosen channel. The problem is to design a sensing policy for channel
selection to maximize the average reward, which can be formulated as a
multi-arm restless bandit process. In this paper, we study the structure,
optimality, and performance of the myopic sensing policy. We show that the
myopic sensing policy has a simple robust structure that reduces channel
selection to a round-robin procedure and obviates the need for knowing the
channel transition probabilities. The optimality of this simple policy is
established for the two-channel case and conjectured for the general case based
on numerical results. The performance of the myopic sensing policy is analyzed,
which, based on the optimality of myopic sensing, characterizes the maximum
throughput of a multi-channel opportunistic communication system and its
scaling behavior with respect to the number of channels. These results apply to
cognitive radio networks, opportunistic transmission in fading environments,
and resource-constrained jamming and anti-jamming.Comment: To appear in IEEE Transactions on Wireless Communications. This is a
revised versio
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