87 research outputs found
Joint power allocation for DF concatenated MIMO successive relaying scheme under network power constraints
Power efficiency is a vital consideration in wireless system. In this paper, we propose a framework for efficient power allocation in decode and forward multiple input multiple output successive relaying systems under network power constraints. Our aim is to maximize the information rate at each link by an optimal power allocation scheme via the primal dual algorithm. Then, we jointly allocate power to the source and transmitting relay under network power constraints. The simulated results show that the proposed joint power allocation scheme under network power constraint can outperform the uniform power allocation under an aggregate power constraints
Spectral-energy efficiency trade-off of relay-aided cellular networks
Wireless communication networks are traditionally designed to operate at high spectral
e ciency with less emphasis on power consumption as it is assumed that endless
power supply is available through the power grid where the cells are connected to. As
new generations of mobile networks exhibit decreasing gains in spectral e ciency, the
mobile industry is forced to consider energy reform policies in order to sustain the
economic growth of itself and other industries relying on it. Consequently, the energy
e ciency of conventional direct transmission cellular networks is being examined
while alternative green network architectures are also explored. The relay-aided cellular
network is being considered as one of the potential network architecture for energy
e cient transmission. However, relaying transmission incurs multiplexing loss due to
its multi-hop protocol. This, in turn, reduces network spectral e ciency. Furthermore,
interference is also expected to increase with the deployment of Relay Stations
(RSs) in the network. This thesis examines the power consumption of the conventional
direct transmission cellular network and contributes to the development of the
relay-aided cellular network.
Firstly, the power consumption of the direct transmission cellular network is investigated.
While most work considered transmitter side strategies, the impact of the
receiver on the Base Station (BS) total power consumption is investigated here. Both
the zero-forcing and minimum mean square error weight optimisation approaches are
considered for both the conventional linear and successive interference cancellation
receivers. The power consumption model which includes both the radio frequency
transmit power and circuit power is described. The in
uence of the receiver interference
cancellation techniques, the number of transceiver antennas, circuit power
consumption and inter-cell interference on the BS total power consumption is investigated.
Secondly, the spectral-energy e ciency trade-o in the relay-aided cellular network is
investigated. The signal forwarding and interference forwarding relaying paradigms
are considered with the direct transmission cellular network taken as the baseline.
This investigation serves to understand the dynamics in the performance trade-o .
To select a suitable balance point in the trade-o , the economic e ciency metric is
proposed whereby the spectral-energy e ciency pair which maximises the economic
pro tability is found. Thus, the economic e ciency metric can be utilised as an alternative
means to optimise the relay-aided cellular network while taking into account
the inherent spectral-energy e ciency trade-o .
Finally, the method of mitigating interference in the relay-aided cellular network is
demonstrated by means of the proposed relay cooperation scheme. In the proposed
scheme, both joint RS decoding and independent RS decoding approaches are considered
during the broadcast phase while joint relay transmission is employed in the
relay phase. Two user selection schemes requiring global Channel State Information
(CSI) are considered. The partial semi-orthogonal user selection method with reduced
CSI requirement is then proposed. As the cooperative cost limits the practicality of
cooperative schemes, the cost incurred at the cooperative links between the RSs is
investigated for varying degrees of RS cooperation. The performance of the relay
cooperation scheme with di erent relay frequency reuse patterns is considered as well.
In a nutshell, the research presented in this thesis reveals the impact of the receiver on
the BS total power consumption in direct transmission cellular networks. The relayaided
cellular network is then presented as an alternative architecture for energy
e cient transmission. The economic e ciency metric is proposed to maximise the
economic pro tability of the relay network while taking into account the existing
spectral-energy e ciency trade-o . To mitigate the interference from the RSs, the
relay cooperation scheme for advanced relay-aided cellular networks is proposed
Distributed transmission schemes for wireless communication networks
In this thesis new techniques are presented to achieve performance enhancement in wireless cooperative networks. In particular, techniques to improve transmission rate and maximise end-to-end signal-to-noise ratio are described.
An offset transmission scheme with full interference cancellation for a wireless cooperative network with frequency flat links and four relays is introduced. This method can asymptotically, as the size of the symbol block increases, achieve maximum transmission rate together with full cooperative diversity provided the destination node has multiple antennas. A novel full inter-relay interference cancellation method that also achieves asymptotically maximum rate and full cooperative diversity is then designed for which the destination node only requires a single antenna.
Two- and four-relay selection schemes for wireless cooperative amplify and forward type networks are then studied in order to overcome the degradation of end-to-end bit error rate performance in single-relay selection networks when there are feedback errors in the relay to destination node links. Outage probability analysis for a four-relay selection scheme without interference is undertaken.
Outage probability analysis of a full rate distributed transmission scheme with inter-relay interference is also studied for best single- and two-relay selection networks.
The advantage of multi-relay selection when no interference occurs and when adjacent cell interference is present at the relay nodes is then shown theoretically. Simulation results for outage probability analysis are included which support the theoretical expressions.
Finally, outage probability analysis of a cognitive amplify and forward type relay network with cooperation between certain secondary users, chosen by best single-, two- and four-relay selection is presented. The cognitive amplify and forward relays are assumed to exploit an underlay approach, which requires adherence to an interference constraint on the primary user. The relay selection scheme is performed either with a max−min strategy or one based on maximising exact end-to-end signal-to-noise ratio. The outage probability analyses are again confirmed by numerical evaluations
Rate enhancement and multi-relay selection schemes for application in wireless cooperative networks
In this thesis new methods are presented to achieve performance enhancement in wireless cooperative networks. In particular, techniques to improve transmission rate, mitigate asynchronous transmission and maximise end-to-end signal-to-noise ratio are described.
An offset transmission scheme with full interference cancellation for a two-hop synchronous network with frequency flat links and four relays is introduced. This approach can asymptotically, as the symbol block size increases, achieve maximum transmission rate together with full cooperative diversity provided the destination node has multiple antennas. A novel full inter-relay interference cancellation method that also achieves asymptotically maximum rate and full cooperative diversity is then designed which only requires a single antenna at the destination node.
Extension to asynchronous networks is then considered through the use of orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM) type transmission with a cyclic prefix, and interference cancellation techniques are designed for situations when synchronization errors are present in only the second hop or both the first and second hop. End-to-end bit error rate evaluations, with and without outer coding, are used to assess the performance of the various offset transmission schemes.
Multi-relay selection methods for cooperative amplify and forward type networks are then studied in order to overcome the degradation of end-to-end bit error rate performance in single-relay selection networks when there are feedback errors in the destination to relay node links. Outage probability analysis for two and four relay selection is performed to show the advantage of multi-relay selection when no interference occurs and when adjacent cell interference is present both at the relay nodes and the destination node. Simulation studies are included which support the theoretical expressions.
Finally, outage probability analysis of a cognitive amplify and forward type relay network with cooperation between certain secondary users, chosen by single and multi-relay (two and four) selection is presented. The cognitive relays are assumed to exploit an underlay approach, which requires adherence to an interference constraint on the primary user. The relay selection is performed either with a max-min strategy or one based on maximising exact end-to-end signal-to-noise ratio. The analyses are again confirmed by numerical evaluations
Virtual full-duplex multiple-input multiple-output relaying in the presence of inter-relay interference
Driven by the increasing demand for wireless broadband, low latency and power-efficient networks, multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) full-duplex relaying (FDR) schemes have gained much attention in recent years. However, the performance of FDR schemes is impaired by sophisticated self-interference suppression techniques. As such, MIMO virtual FDR (VFDR) schemes have been considered as practical alternatives to recover spectral efficiency loss in half-duplex relays (HDR) without the need for sophisticated self-interference suppression algorithms. Successive relaying (SR) scheme is one of the VFDR techniques which uses a pair of HD relays that alternate between reception and retransmission of the source information to the destination. The performance of the SR based VFDR scheme is affected by inter-relay interference (IRI) due to the concurrent transmission of the source and relay nodes. The interference in VFDR schemes is conventionally treated as a degrading factor on the information decoding receivers resulting in the design of several interference avoidance and cancellation techniques. On the contrary, this thesis developed several VFDR schemes which exploit the interference to achieve performance improvement. In this study, interference management techniques, transmit/receive beamforming matrices, power allocation and joint optimisation algorithms were developed. First, a reliable MIMO VFDR scheme in the presence of IRI was designed, where the IRI was exploited for reliability improvements. The results showed significant reliability improvement over the existing schemes. Second, a joint power allocation for MIMO VFDR schemes under network power constraint was developed. The power allocation problem in the presence of IRI was formulated based on primal-dual algorithm. The results showed that the joint optimisation algorithm can efficiently utilise the network power when compared with the conventional approach. Third, simultaneous wireless information and power transfer (SWIPT) in MIMO VFDR system was proposed, where the transmit beamforming matrices which optimise the achievable rate and harvested energy at the relays were jointly designed. The results showed that the interference energy can be harnessed to improve the SWIPT system throughput. Finally, a joint optimisation of the power split and relay position in SWIPT MIMO VFDR network were investigated. Results showed that the joint optimisation of the power split and distance factors can greatly improve the system outage performance. The analytical and numerical results in the research showed that IRI can be exploited to improve the throughput, reliability and energy harvesting of a wireless communication system. The results also showed a minimum achievable rate improvement of 80% over the HDR schemes and a reliability of 100% over the FDR schemes
Detection techniques for alternate-relaying cooperative communications systems
Cooperative technology constitutes a breakthrough in the design of wireless communication
systems. This is due to its relatively simple implementation and its significant
performance gains in terms of link reliability, system capacity, and transmission
range. In cooperative communications, multiple terminals in a network
cooperate by relaying each other’s information, forming a virtual antenna array,
and, thus realizing spatial diversity in a distributed fashion. It is not surprising
that cooperative communications have become a strong candidate for many wireless
applications, such as cellular networks, wireless local area network, mobile
ad-hoc networks, and wireless sensor networks. However, cooperative technology
is not without challenges. A major problem in this technology is the reduction
in spectral efficiency, which results from the half-duplex constraint at the relays
and orthogonal relay transmission. This has spurred researchers to investigate cooperative
strategies to recover the spectral efficiency loss. Such strategies can be
classified into three main categories.
One category supposes that each source transmits a ’superimposed’ signal,
which consists of its own data and relaying information. This superposition can
be performed in code or in modulation domain. Obviously, if the relay does not
have its own data, a full-rate transmission can not be achieved.
The second category is to employ adaptive modulation techniques where the
spectral efficiency is improved by changing modulation size with fixed symbol
rate. However, the transmitter needs to know the channel signal-to-noise (SNR)
such that the best suitable modulation is chosen and the receiver must be informed
on the used modulation in order to decode the information.
This leads to an increased overhead in the system as compared with a fixed
modulation system, and will increase the complexity of the receiver too.
The third one utilizes two-relay, which alternatively transmit and receive. A
key feature of this category is that the source continues to transmit data, while the
two relays take turns in receiving and transmitting the data from the source. Due
to the simultaneous transmission of the data streams through both direct and one
of relay channels, harmful interference occurs at the relays and destination. The
interference occurred at the relays and destination represents a drawback in this
case, though.
According to our best knowledge, no previous research was done to develop
the optimal detectors for alternate-relaying cooperative (ARC) systems. Further,
all the previous works for ARC systems have in common that they do not exploit
any properties of the underlying error correcting codes. It is therefore necessary to
propose optimal detection techniques for uncoded and coded two-relay systems.
This motivated us to do this research. In this thesis, we proposed optimal and
suboptimal detectors to mitigate the influence of the interference signal for the uncoded
and coded decode-and-forward (DF) ARC systems
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