447 research outputs found
Optimal Offline and Competitive Online Strategies for Transmitter-Receiver Energy Harvesting
Transmitter-receiver energy harvesting model is assumed, where both the
transmitter and receiver are powered by random energy source. Given a fixed
number of bits, the problem is to find the optimal transmission power profile
at the transmitter and ON-OFF profile at the receiver to minimize the
transmission time. Structure of the optimal offline strategy is derived
together with an optimal offline policy. An online policy with competitive
ratio of strictly less than two is also derived
Energy Harvesting Networks with General Utility Functions: Near Optimal Online Policies
We consider online scheduling policies for single-user energy harvesting
communication systems, where the goal is to characterize online policies that
maximize the long term average utility, for some general concave and
monotonically increasing utility function. In our setting, the transmitter
relies on energy harvested from nature to send its messages to the receiver,
and is equipped with a finite-sized battery to store its energy. Energy packets
are independent and identically distributed (i.i.d.) over time slots, and are
revealed causally to the transmitter. Only the average arrival rate is known a
priori. We first characterize the optimal solution for the case of Bernoulli
arrivals. Then, for general i.i.d. arrivals, we first show that fixed fraction
policies [Shaviv-Ozgur] are within a constant multiplicative gap from the
optimal solution for all energy arrivals and battery sizes. We then derive a
set of sufficient conditions on the utility function to guarantee that fixed
fraction policies are within a constant additive gap as well from the optimal
solution.Comment: To appear in the 2017 IEEE International Symposium on Information
Theory. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1705.1030
On Distributed Power Control for Uncoordinated Dual Energy Harvesting Links: Performance Bounds and Near-Optimal Policies
In this paper, we consider a point-to-point link between an energy harvesting
transmitter and receiver, where neither node has the information about the
battery state or energy availability at the other node. We consider a model
where data is successfully delivered only in slots where both nodes are active.
Energy loss occurs whenever one node turns on while the other node is in sleep
mode. In each slot, based on their own energy availability, the transmitter and
receiver need to independently decide whether or not to turn on, with the aim
of maximizing the long-term time-average throughput. We present an upper bound
on the throughput achievable by analyzing a genie-aided system that has
noncausal knowledge of the energy arrivals at both the nodes. Next, we propose
an online policy requiring an occasional one-bit feedback whose throughput is
within one bit of the upper bound, asymptotically in the battery size. In order
to further reduce the feedback required, we propose a time-dilated version of
the online policy. As the time dilation gets large, this policy does not
require any feedback and achieves the upper bound asymptotically in the battery
size. Inspired by this, we also propose a near-optimal fully uncoordinated
policy. We use Monte Carlo simulations to validate our theoretical results and
illustrate the performance of the proposed policies.Comment: 8 page
Energy Harvesting Wireless Communications: A Review of Recent Advances
This article summarizes recent contributions in the broad area of energy
harvesting wireless communications. In particular, we provide the current state
of the art for wireless networks composed of energy harvesting nodes, starting
from the information-theoretic performance limits to transmission scheduling
policies and resource allocation, medium access and networking issues. The
emerging related area of energy transfer for self-sustaining energy harvesting
wireless networks is considered in detail covering both energy cooperation
aspects and simultaneous energy and information transfer. Various potential
models with energy harvesting nodes at different network scales are reviewed as
well as models for energy consumption at the nodes.Comment: To appear in the IEEE Journal of Selected Areas in Communications
(Special Issue: Wireless Communications Powered by Energy Harvesting and
Wireless Energy Transfer
Save and Transmit Scheme for Energy Harvesting MIMO Systems with TAS/MRC
In this paper, we propose and analyze a wirelesstransmitter, for multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) systems,that relies exclusively on energy harvesting. We consider wirelesstransceivers where the transmitter harvests the total requiredenergy from its environment through various sources. We assumethat both transmitter and receiver are equipped with multipleantennas. At the transmitter, a single transmit antenna thatmaximizes the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) at the receiver isselected for transmission. The remaining antennas are used forenergy harvesting. At the receiver side, maximal-ratio com-bining (MRC) is used. Furthermore, we assume that all theharvested power is used to power the transmitter immediately.The performance of the proposed scheme is analyzed in terms ofoutage probability (OP), symbol error rate (SER) and channelcapacity. The harvested energy comes from random sourcesand is considered as a random variable. Assuming that theharvested power follows a gamma distribution and the MIMOchannel is a Rayleigh flat fading process, we derive a closed-form expressions for the exact cumulative distribution function(CDF) and probability density function (PDF) of the SNR. Basedon this, we analyze the performance of the proposed energyharvesting scheme. The obtained analytical results are validatedby comparing them with the results of Monte-Carlo simulations
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