354 research outputs found
Vandermonde-subspace Frequency Division Multiplexing for Two-Tiered Cognitive Radio Networks
Vandermonde-subspace frequency division multiplexing (VFDM) is an overlay
spectrum sharing technique for cognitive radio. VFDM makes use of a precoder
based on a Vandermonde structure to transmit information over a secondary
system, while keeping an orthogonal frequency division multiplexing
(OFDM)-based primary system interference-free. To do so, VFDM exploits
frequency selectivity and the use of cyclic prefixes by the primary system.
Herein, a global view of VFDM is presented, including also practical aspects
such as linear receivers and the impact of channel estimation. We show that
VFDM provides a spectral efficiency increase of up to 1 bps/Hz over cognitive
radio systems based on unused band detection. We also present some key design
parameters for its future implementation and a feasible channel estimation
protocol. Finally we show that, even when some of the theoretical assumptions
are relaxed, VFDM provides non-negligible rates while protecting the primary
system.Comment: 9 pages, accepted for publication in IEEE Transactions on
Communication
Interference Alignment for Cognitive Radio Communications and Networks: A Survey
© 2019 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).Interference alignment (IA) is an innovative wireless transmission strategy that has shown to be a promising technique for achieving optimal capacity scaling of a multiuser interference channel at asymptotically high-signal-to-noise ratio (SNR). Transmitters exploit the availability of multiple signaling dimensions in order to align their mutual interference at the receivers. Most of the research has focused on developing algorithms for determining alignment solutions as well as proving interference alignment’s theoretical ability to achieve the maximum degrees of freedom in a wireless network. Cognitive radio, on the other hand, is a technique used to improve the utilization of the radio spectrum by opportunistically sensing and accessing unused licensed frequency spectrum, without causing harmful interference to the licensed users. With the increased deployment of wireless services, the possibility of detecting unused frequency spectrum becomes diminished. Thus, the concept of introducing interference alignment in cognitive radio has become a very attractive proposition. This paper provides a survey of the implementation of IA in cognitive radio under the main research paradigms, along with a summary and analysis of results under each system model.Peer reviewe
A Distributed Approach to Interference Alignment in OFDM-based Two-tiered Networks
In this contribution, we consider a two-tiered network and focus on the
coexistence between the two tiers at physical layer. We target our efforts on a
long term evolution advanced (LTE-A) orthogonal frequency division multiple
access (OFDMA) macro-cell sharing the spectrum with a randomly deployed second
tier of small-cells. In such networks, high levels of co-channel interference
between the macro and small base stations (MBS/SBS) may largely limit the
potential spectral efficiency gains provided by the frequency reuse 1. To
address this issue, we propose a novel cognitive interference alignment based
scheme to protect the macro-cell from the cross-tier interference, while
mitigating the co-tier interference in the second tier. Remarkably, only local
channel state information (CSI) and autonomous operations are required in the
second tier, resulting in a completely self-organizing approach for the SBSs.
The optimal precoder that maximizes the spectral efficiency of the link between
each SBS and its served user equipment is found by means of a distributed
one-shot strategy. Numerical findings reveal non-negligible spectral efficiency
enhancements with respect to traditional time division multiple access
approaches at any signal to noise (SNR) regime. Additionally, the proposed
technique exhibits significant robustness to channel estimation errors,
achieving remarkable results for the imperfect CSI case and yielding consistent
performance enhancements to the network.Comment: 15 pages, 10 figures, accepted and to appear in IEEE Transactions on
Vehicular Technology Special Section: Self-Organizing Radio Networks, 2013.
Authors' final version. Copyright transferred to IEE
MIMO Interference Alignment Over Correlated Channels with Imperfect CSI
Interference alignment (IA), given uncorrelated channel components and
perfect channel state information, obtains the maximum degrees of freedom in an
interference channel. Little is known, however, about how the sum rate of IA
behaves at finite transmit power, with imperfect channel state information, or
antenna correlation. This paper provides an approximate closed-form
signal-to-interference-plus-noise-ratio (SINR) expression for IA over
multiple-input-multiple-output (MIMO) channels with imperfect channel state
information and transmit antenna correlation. Assuming linear processing at the
transmitters and zero-forcing receivers, random matrix theory tools are
utilized to derive an approximation for the post-processing SINR distribution
of each stream for each user. Perfect channel knowledge and i.i.d. channel
coefficients constitute special cases. This SINR distribution not only allows
easy calculation of useful performance metrics like sum rate and symbol error
rate, but also permits a realistic comparison of IA with other transmission
techniques. More specifically, IA is compared with spatial multiplexing and
beamforming and it is shown that IA may not be optimal for some performance
criteria.Comment: 21 pages, 7 figures, submitted to IEEE Transactions on Signal
Processin
Cognitive Orthogonal Precoder for Two-tiered Networks Deployment
In this work, the problem of cross-tier interference in a two-tiered
(macro-cell and cognitive small-cells) network, under the complete spectrum
sharing paradigm, is studied. A new orthogonal precoder transmit scheme for the
small base stations, called multi-user Vandermonde-subspace frequency division
multiplexing (MU-VFDM), is proposed. MU-VFDM allows several cognitive small
base stations to coexist with legacy macro-cell receivers, by nulling the
small- to macro-cell cross-tier interference, without any cooperation between
the two tiers. This cleverly designed cascaded precoder structure, not only
cancels the cross-tier interference, but avoids the co-tier interference for
the small-cell network. The achievable sum-rate of the small-cell network,
satisfying the interference cancelation requirements, is evaluated for perfect
and imperfect channel state information at the transmitter. Simulation results
for the cascaded MU-VFDM precoder show a comparable performance to that of
state-of-the-art dirty paper coding technique, for the case of a dense cellular
layout. Finally, a comparison between MU-VFDM and a standard complete spectrum
separation strategy is proposed. Promising gains in terms of achievable
sum-rate are shown for the two-tiered network w.r.t. the traditional bandwidth
management approach.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figures, accepted and to appear in IEEE Journal on
Selected Areas in Communications: Cognitive Radio Series, 2013. Copyright
transferred to IEE
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