2,578 research outputs found

    On Capacity and Optimal Scheduling for the Half-Duplex Multiple-Relay Channel

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    We study the half-duplex multiple-relay channel (HD-MRC) where every node can either transmit or listen but cannot do both at the same time. We obtain a capacity upper bound based on a max-flow min-cut argument and achievable transmission rates based on the decode-forward (DF) coding strategy, for both the discrete memoryless HD-MRC and the phase-fading HD-MRC. We discover that both the upper bound and the achievable rates are functions of the transmit/listen state (a description of which nodes transmit and which receive). More precisely, they are functions of the time fraction of the different states, which we term a schedule. We formulate the optimal scheduling problem to find an optimal schedule that maximizes the DF rate. The optimal scheduling problem turns out to be a maximin optimization, for which we propose an algorithmic solution. We demonstrate our approach on a four-node multiple-relay channel, obtaining closed-form solutions in certain scenarios. Furthermore, we show that for the received signal-to-noise ratio degraded phase-fading HD-MRC, the optimal scheduling problem can be simplified to a max optimization.Comment: Author's final version (to appear in IEEE Transactions on Information Theory

    Cooperative Multiplexing in the Multiple Antenna Half Duplex Relay Channel

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    Cooperation between terminals has been proposed to improve the reliability and throughput of wireless communication. While recent work has shown that relay cooperation provides increased diversity, increased multiplexing gain over that offered by direct link has largely been unexplored. In this work we show that cooperative multiplexing gain can be achieved by using a half duplex relay. We capture relative distances between terminals in the high SNR diversity multiplexing tradeoff (DMT) framework. The DMT performance is then characterized for a network having a single antenna half-duplex relay between a single-antenna source and two-antenna destination. Our results show that the achievable multiplexing gain using cooperation can be greater than that of the direct link and is a function of the relative distance between source and relay compared to the destination. Moreover, for multiplexing gains less than 1, a simple scheme of the relay listening 1/3 of the time and transmitting 2/3 of the time can achieve the 2 by 2 MIMO DMT.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures submitted to ISIT 200

    Capacity region of the deterministic multi-pair bi-directional relay network

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    In this paper we study the capacity region of the multi-pair bidirectional (or two-way) wireless relay network, in which a relay node facilitates the communication between multiple pairs of users. This network is a generalization of the well known bidirectional relay channel, where we have only one pair of users. We examine this problem in the context of the deterministic channel interaction model, which eliminates the channel noise and allows us to focus on the interaction between signals. We characterize the capacity region of this network when the relay is operating at either full-duplex mode or half-duplex mode (with non adaptive listen-transmit scheduling). In both cases we show that the cut-set upper bound is tight and, quite interestingly, the capacity region is achieved by a simple equation-forwarding strategy.Comment: Will be presented in the 2009 IEEE Information Theory Workshop on Networking and Information Theor

    Optimal Scheduling and Power Allocation for Two-Hop Energy Harvesting Communication Systems

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    Energy harvesting (EH) has recently emerged as a promising technique for green communications. To realize its potential, communication protocols need to be redesigned to combat the randomness of the harvested energy. In this paper, we investigate how to apply relaying to improve the short-term performance of EH communication systems. With an EH source and a non-EH half-duplex relay, we consider two different design objectives: 1) short-term throughput maximization; and 2) transmission completion time minimization. Both problems are joint scheduling and power allocation problems, rendered quite challenging by the half-duplex constraint at the relay. A key finding is that directional water-filling (DWF), which is the optimal power allocation algorithm for the single-hop EH system, can serve as guideline for the design of two-hop communication systems, as it not only determines the value of the optimal performance, but also forms the basis to derive optimal solutions for both design problems. Based on a relaxed energy profile along with the DWF algorithm, we derive key properties of the optimal solutions for both problems and thereafter propose efficient algorithms. Simulation results will show that both scheduling and power allocation optimizations are necessary in two-hop EH communication systems.Comment: Submitted to IEEE Transaction on Wireless Communicatio
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