55 research outputs found

    Transceiver design for wireless energy harvesting cooperative networks

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    In this thesis, the RF energy harvesting technique is studied in the cooperative wireless network, and different optimization studies are investigated. First, an energy-efficient optimization is considered in the cooperative system with the time switching relaying and power splitting relaying protocols. Then, a security issue in the cooperative network with energy harvesting is proposed, in which the optimization problem is designed to maximize the secrecy rate. We also consider the application of energy harvesting in the full-duplex relaying network with a self-energy recycling protocol. Finally, the energy harvesting is studied in the full-duplex cooperative cognitive radio network. The system performance of all studies is verified in the thesis with MATLAB simulation results

    Wireless Powered Communication Networks

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    The limited life time of batteries is a crucial issue in energy-constrained wireless communications. Recently, the radio frequency (RF) wireless energy transfer (WET) technique has been developed as a new practical method to extend the life time of wireless communication networks. Inspired by this, wireless-powered communication network (WPCN) has attracted much attention. Therefore, in this thesis, we consider practical WET and wireless-powered information transmission in WPCNs. First we investigate a WPCN with two nodes, in which an access point (AP) exchanges information with a wireless-powered user. The user is assumed to have no embedded energy supply and needs to harvest energy from RF signals broadcast by the AP. Differing from existing work that focuses on the design of wireless-powered communication with one-way information flow, we deal with a more general scenario where both the AP and the user have information to transmit. Considering that the AP and user can work in either half-duplex or full-duplex mode as well as having two practical receiver architectures at the user side, we propose five elementary communication protocols for the considered system. Moreover, we define the concept of a throughput region to characterize the tradeoff between the uplink and downlink throughput in all proposed protocols. Numerical simulations are finally performed to compare the throughput regions of the proposed five elementary protocols. To further the study on WPCN, we investigate a wireless-powered two-way relay system, in which two wireless-powered sources exchange information through a multi-antenna relay. Both sources are assumed to have no embedded energy supply and thus first need to harvest energy from the radio frequency signals broadcast by the relay before exchanging their information via the relay. We aim to maximize the sum throughput of both sources by jointly optimizing the time switching duration, the energy beamforming vector and the precoding matrix at the relay. The formulated problem is non-convex and hard to solve in its original form. Motivated by this, we simplify the problem by reducing the number of variables and by decomposing the precoding matrix into a transmit vector and a receive vector. We then propose a bisection search, a 1-D search and an iterative algorithm to optimize each variable. Numerical results show that our proposed scheme can achieve higher throughput than the conventional scheme without optimization on the beamforming vector and precoding matrix at the relay. Due to the high attenuation of RF energy over a long distance, RF based wireless-powered communication is usually designed for low-power scenarios, e.g., wireless-powered sensor networks. Recently, magnetic induction (MI) based WET has been proposed to wirelessly transfer a large amount of energy. Inspired by this, we investigate MI based WET in WPCN. Specifically, we study a MI based wireless-powered relaying network, in which a MI source transmits information to a MI destination, with the help of a MI based wireless powered relay. We propose four active relaying schemes, which consider different relaying modes and different energy harvesting receiver architectures at the relay. We then aim to maximize the end-to-end throughput of each scheme by using a bisection search, a water-filling algorithm, a Lagrange multiplier, quasi-convex programming and an iterative algorithm. We compare the proposed active relaying schemes with passive relaying. Numerical results show that the proposed relaying schemes with a decode-and-forward relaying mode significantly improve the throughput over passive relaying

    Throughput Analysis and Optimization of Wireless-Powered Multiple Antenna Full-Duplex Relay Systems

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    We consider a full-duplex (FD) decode-and-forward system in which the time-switching protocol is employed by the multi-antenna relay to receive energy from the source and transmit information to the destination. The instantaneous throughput is maximized by optimizing receive and transmit beamformers at the relay and the time-split parameter. We study both optimum and suboptimum schemes. The reformulated problem in the optimum scheme achieves closed-form solutions in terms of transmit beamformer for some scenarios. In other scenarios, the optimization problem is formulated as a semi-definite relaxation problem and a rank-one optimum solution is always guaranteed. In the suboptimum schemes, the beamformers are obtained using maximum ratio combining, zero-forcing, and maximum ratio transmission. When beamformers have closed-form solutions, the achievable instantaneous and delay-constrained throughput are analytically characterized. Our results reveal that, beamforming increases both the energy harvesting and loop interference suppression capabilities at the FD relay. Moreover, simulation results demonstrate that the choice of the linear processing scheme as well as the time-split plays a critical role in determining the FD gains.Comment: Accepted for publication in IEEE Transactions on Communication
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