113 research outputs found

    Sum Throughput Maximization in Multi-Tag Backscattering to Multiantenna Reader

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    Backscatter communication (BSC) is being realized as the core technology for pervasive sustainable Internet-of-Things applications. However, owing to the resource-limitations of passive tags, the efficient usage of multiple antennas at the reader is essential for both downlink excitation and uplink detection. This work targets at maximizing the achievable sum-backscattered-throughput by jointly optimizing the transceiver (TRX) design at the reader and backscattering coefficients (BC) at the tags. Since, this joint problem is nonconvex, we first present individually-optimal designs for the TRX and BC. We show that with precoder and {combiner} designs at the reader respectively targeting downlink energy beamforming and uplink Wiener filtering operations, the BC optimization at tags can be reduced to a binary power control problem. Next, the asymptotically-optimal joint-TRX-BC designs are proposed for both low and high signal-to-noise-ratio regimes. Based on these developments, an iterative low-complexity algorithm is proposed to yield an efficient jointly-suboptimal design. Thereafter, we discuss the practical utility of the proposed designs to other application settings like wireless powered communication networks and BSC with imperfect channel state information. Lastly, selected numerical results, validating the analysis and shedding novel insights, demonstrate that the proposed designs can yield significant enhancement in the sum-backscattered throughput over existing benchmarks.Comment: 17 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in IEEE Transactions on Communication

    UAV-enabled wireless-powered Iot wireless sensor networks

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    Future massive internet of thing (IoT) networks will enable the vision of smart cities, where it is anticipated that a massive number of sensor devices, in the order of tens of millions devices, ubiquitously deployed to monitor the environment. Main challenges in such a network are how to improve the network lifetime and design an e cient data aggregation process. To improve the lifetime, using low-power passive sensor devices have recently shown great potential. Ambient backscattering is a novel technology which provides low-power long-range wireless communication expanding the network lifetime signi cantly. On the other hand, in order to collect the sensed data from sensor devices deployed over a wide area, unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) has been considered as a promising technology, by leveraging the UAV's high mobility and line-of-sight (LOS) dominated air-ground channels. The UAV can act as data aggregator collecting sensed data from all sensors. In this thesis, we consider medium-access control (MAC) policies for two sensor data collection scenarios. First, the objective is to collect individual sensor data from the eld. The challenge in this case is to determine how a large number of sensors should access the medium so that data aggregation process performed in a fast and reliable fashion. Utilizing conventional orthogonal medium access schemes (e.g., time-division vi multiple access (TDMA) and frequency-division multiple access (FDMA)), is highly energy consuming and spectrally ine cient. Hence, we employ non-orthogonal multiple access (NOMA) which is envisaged as an essential enabling technology for 5G wireless networks especially for uncoordinated transmissions. In Chapter 2, we develop a framework where the UAV is used as a replacement to conventional terrestrial data collectors in order to increase the e ciency of collecting data from a eld of passive backscatter sensors, and simultaneously it acts as a mobile RF carrier emitter to activate backscatter sensors. In the MAC layer, we employ uplink power-domain NOMA scheme to e ectively serve a large number of passive backscatter sensors. Our objective is to optimize the path, altitude, and beamwidth of the UAV such that the network throughput is maximized. In Chapter 3, we consider the scenario where there are a separate data collector and RF carrier emitter such that the former is a gateway on the ground and the latter is a single UAV hovering over the eld of backscatter sensors. Secondly, we consider a case where only a function of sensed data is of interest rather than individual sensor values. A new challenge arises where the problem is to design a communication policy to improve the accuracy of the estimated function. Recently, over-the-air computation (AirComp) has emerged to be a promising solution to enable merging computation and communication by utilizing the superposition property of wireless channels, when a function of measurements are desired rather than individual in massive IoT sensor networks. One of the key challenges in AirComp is to compensate the e ects of channel. Motivated by this, in Chapter 4, we propose a UAV assisted communication framework to tackle this problem by a simple to implement sampling-then-mapping mechanism

    Design of Non-Orthogonal Multiple Access Enhanced Backscatter Communication

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    Backscatter communication (BackCom), which allows a backscatter node (BN) to communicate with the reader by modulating and reflecting the incident continuous wave from the reader, is considered a promising solution to power the future Internet-of-Things. In this paper, we consider a single BackCom system, where multiple BNs are served by a reader. We propose using the power-domain non-orthogonal multiple access (NOMA), i.e., multiplexing the BNs in different regions or with different backscattered power levels, to enhance the spectrum efficiency of the BackCom system. To better exploit power-domain NOMA, we propose setting the reflection coefficients for multiplexed BNs to be different. Based on this considered model, we develop the reflection coefficient selection criteria. To illustrate the enhanced system with the proposed criteria, we analyze the performance of the BackCom system in terms of the average number of bits that can be successfully decoded by the reader for the two-node pairing case and the average number of successful BNs for the general multiplexing case. Our results show that NOMA achieves the much better performance gain in the BackCom system as compared to its performance gain in the conventional system, which highlights the importance of applying NOMA to the BackCom systemThis work was supported by the Australian Research Council’s Discovery Project Funding Scheme under Project DP170100939

    Cross-Sender Bit-Mixing Coding

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    Scheduling to avoid packet collisions is a long-standing challenge in networking, and has become even trickier in wireless networks with multiple senders and multiple receivers. In fact, researchers have proved that even {\em perfect} scheduling can only achieve R=O(1lnN)\mathbf{R} = O(\frac{1}{\ln N}). Here NN is the number of nodes in the network, and R\mathbf{R} is the {\em medium utilization rate}. Ideally, one would hope to achieve R=Θ(1)\mathbf{R} = \Theta(1), while avoiding all the complexities in scheduling. To this end, this paper proposes {\em cross-sender bit-mixing coding} ({\em BMC}), which does not rely on scheduling. Instead, users transmit simultaneously on suitably-chosen slots, and the amount of overlap in different user's slots is controlled via coding. We prove that in all possible network topologies, using BMC enables us to achieve R=Θ(1)\mathbf{R}=\Theta(1). We also prove that the space and time complexities of BMC encoding/decoding are all low-order polynomials.Comment: Published in the International Conference on Information Processing in Sensor Networks (IPSN), 201
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