65 research outputs found
Adaptive space-time processing for digital mobile radio communication systems
The performance of digital mobile radio communication systems is primarily limited by cochannel interference and multipath fading. Antenna arrays, with optimum combining (OC), have been shown to combat multipath fading of the desired signal and are capable of reducing the power of interfering signals at the receiver through spatial filtering. With OC, the signals received by several antenna elements are weighted and combined to maximize the output signal-to-interference-plus-noise ratio (SLNR). We derive new closed-form expressions for (1) the probability density function (PDF) of the SINR at the output of the optimum combiner, (2) the average probability of bit error rate (BER) and its upper bound, and (3) the outage probability in a Rayleigh fading environment with multiple cochannel interferers. The study covers both the case when the number of antenna elements exceeds the number of interferers and vice versa. We consider independent fading at each antenna element, as well as the effect of fading correlation. The analysis is also extended to processing using maximal ratio combining (MRC). The performance of the optimum combiner is compared to that of the maximal ratio combiner and results show that OC performs significantly better than MRC.
We investigate the performance of OC in a microcellular environment where the desired signal and the cochannel interference can have different statistical characteristics. The desired signal is assumed to have Rician statistics implying that a dominant multipath reflection or a line-of-sight (LOS) propagation exists within-cell transmission. Interfering signals from cochannel cells are assumed to be subject to Rayleigh fading due to the absence of LOS propagation. This is the so called Rician/Rayleigh model. We also study OC for a special case of the Rician/Rayleigh model, the Nonfading/Rayleigh model. We derive expressions for the PDF of the SJNR, the BER and the outage probability for both Rician/Rayleigh and Nonfading/Rayleigh models. Similar expressions are derived with MRC.
Another area in which space-time processing may provide significant benefits is when wideband signals (such as code division multiple access (CDMA) signals) are overlaid on existing narrowband user signals. The conventional approach of rejecting narrowband interference in direct-sequence (DS) CDMA systems has been to sample the received signal at the chip interval, and to exploit the high correlation between the interference samples prior to spread spectrum demodulation. A different approach is space-time processing. We study two space-time receiver architectures, referred to as cascade and joint, respectively, and evaluate the performance of a DS-CDMA signal overlaying a narrowband signal for personal communication systems (PCS). We define aild evaluate the asymptotic efficiency of each configuration. We develop new closed-form expressions for the PDF of the SINR at the array output, the BER and its upper bound, for both cascade and joint configurations. We also analyze the performance of this system in the presence of multiple access interference (MAJ)
OUTAGE PERFORMANCE OF COGNITIVE RF/FSO SYSTEM WITH MRC SCHEME AT THE RECEIVER
The aim of this paper is performance analysis of the hybrid radio frequency (RF)/free-space optical (FSO) system, where the transmission is performed simultaneously over FSO link and spectrum sharing cognitive RF sub-system. The FSO link is affected by Gamma-Gamma atmospheric turbulence, while in spectrum sharing cognitive RF sub-system the peak interference power constraint at the primary user's receiver is considered in Nakagami-m fading environment. Outage probability expressions are provided in the integral form for the case when the maximal ratio combining (MRC) is applied at the destination. The effects of the atmospheric turbulence strength, the number of RF antennas, allowable power and fading severity on the outage performance are observed. Numerical results are presented and verified by Monte Carlo simulations
Joint Spatial and Spectrum Cooperation in Wireless Network.
PhDThe sky-rocketing growth of multimedia infotainment applications and broadband-hungry
mobile devices exacerbate the stringent demand for ultra high data rate and more spectrum resources. Along with it, the unbalanced temporal and geographical variations
of spectrum usage further inspires those spectral-efficient networks, namely, cognitive
radio and heterogeneous cellular networks (HCNs). This thesis focuses on the system
design and performance enhancement of cognitive radio (CR) and HCNs. Three different
aspects of performance improvement are considered, including link reliability of cognitive
radio networks (CNs), security enhancement of CNs, and energy efficiency improvement
of CNs and HCNs.
First, generalized selection combining (GSC) is proposed as an effective receiver design
for interference reduction and reliability improvement of CNs with outdated CSI. A uni-
ed way for deriving the distribution of received signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) is developed
in underlay spectrum sharing networks subject to interference from the primary trans-
mitter (PU-Tx) to the secondary receiver (SU-Rx), maximum transmit power constraint
at the secondary transmitter (SU-Tx), and peak interference power constraint at the
PU receiver (PU-Rx), is developed. Second, transmit antenna selection with receive
generalized selection combining (TAS/GSC) in multi-antenna relay-aided communica-
tion is introduced in CNs under Rayleigh fading and Nakagami-m fading. Based on
newly derived complex statistical properties of channel power gain of TAS/GSC, exact
ergodic capacity and high SNR ergodic capacity are derived over Nakagami-m fading.
Third, beamforming and arti cial noise generation (BF&AN) is introduced as a robust
scheme to enhance the secure transmission of large-scale spectrum sharing networks
with multiple randomly located eavesdroppers (Eves) modeled as homogeneous Poisson
Point Process (PPP). Stochastic geometry is applied to model and analyze the impact of
i
BF&AN on this complex network. Optimal power allocation factor for BF&AN which
maximizes the average secrecy rate is further studied under the outage probability con-
straint of primary network. Fourth, a new wireless energy harvesting protocol is proposed
for underlay cognitive relay networks with the energy-constrained SU-Txs. Exact and
asymptotic outage probability, delay-sensitive throughput, and delay-tolerant through-
put are derived to explore the tradeoff between the energy harvested from the PU-Txs
and the interference caused by the PU-Txs. Fifth, a harvest-then-transmit protocol is
proposed in K-tier HCNs with randomly located multiple-antenna base stations (BSs)
and single antenna mobile terminals (MTs) modeled as homogeneous PPP. The average
received power at MT, the uplink (UL) outage probability, and the UL average ergodic
rate are derived to demonstrate the intrinsic relationship between the energy harvested
from BSs in the downlink (DL) and the MT performance in the UL. Throughout the
thesis, it is shown that link reliability, secrecy performance, and energy efficiency of
CNs and HCNs can be signi cantly leveraged by taking advantage of multiple antennas,
relays, and wireless energy harvesting
Distributed transmission schemes for wireless communication networks
In this thesis new techniques are presented to achieve performance enhancement in wireless cooperative networks. In particular, techniques to improve transmission rate and maximise end-to-end signal-to-noise ratio are described.
An offset transmission scheme with full interference cancellation for a wireless cooperative network with frequency flat links and four relays is introduced. This method can asymptotically, as the size of the symbol block increases, achieve maximum transmission rate together with full cooperative diversity provided the destination node has multiple antennas. A novel full inter-relay interference cancellation method that also achieves asymptotically maximum rate and full cooperative diversity is then designed for which the destination node only requires a single antenna.
Two- and four-relay selection schemes for wireless cooperative amplify and forward type networks are then studied in order to overcome the degradation of end-to-end bit error rate performance in single-relay selection networks when there are feedback errors in the relay to destination node links. Outage probability analysis for a four-relay selection scheme without interference is undertaken.
Outage probability analysis of a full rate distributed transmission scheme with inter-relay interference is also studied for best single- and two-relay selection networks.
The advantage of multi-relay selection when no interference occurs and when adjacent cell interference is present at the relay nodes is then shown theoretically. Simulation results for outage probability analysis are included which support the theoretical expressions.
Finally, outage probability analysis of a cognitive amplify and forward type relay network with cooperation between certain secondary users, chosen by best single-, two- and four-relay selection is presented. The cognitive amplify and forward relays are assumed to exploit an underlay approach, which requires adherence to an interference constraint on the primary user. The relay selection scheme is performed either with a max−min strategy or one based on maximising exact end-to-end signal-to-noise ratio. The outage probability analyses are again confirmed by numerical evaluations
Physical Layer Security in Wireless Networks: Design and Enhancement.
PhDSecurity and privacy have become increasingly significant concerns in wireless communication
networks, due to the open nature of the wireless medium which makes the wireless
transmission vulnerable to eavesdropping and inimical attacking. The emergence and
development of decentralized and ad-hoc wireless networks pose great challenges to the
implementation of higher-layer key distribution and management in practice. Against
this background, physical layer security has emerged as an attractive approach for performing
secure transmission in a low complexity manner. This thesis concentrates on
physical layer security design and enhancement in wireless networks.
First, this thesis presents a new unifying framework to analyze the average secrecy
capacity and secrecy outage probability. Besides the exact average secrecy capacity
and secrecy outage probability, a new approach for analyzing the asymptotic behavior is
proposed to compute key performance parameters such as high signal-to-noise ratio slope,
power offset, secrecy diversity order, and secrecy array gain. Typical fading environments
such as two-wave with diffuse power and Nakagami-m are taken into account.
Second, an analytical framework of using antenna selection schemes to achieve secrecy
is provided. In particular, transmit antenna selection and generalized selection combining
are considered including its special cases of selection combining and maximal-ratio
combining.
Third, the fundamental questions surrounding the joint impact of power constraints on
the cognitive wiretap channel are addressed. Important design insights are revealed
regarding the interplay between two power constraints, namely the maximum transmit
at the secondary network and the peak interference power at the primary network.
Fourth, secure single carrier transmission is considered in the two-hop decode-andi
forward relay networks. A two-stage relay and destination selection is proposed to minimize
the eavesdropping and maximize the signal power of the link between the relay and
the destination. In two-hop amplify-and-forward untrusted relay networks, secrecy may
not be guaranteed even in the absence of external eavesdroppers. As such, cooperative
jamming with optimal power allocation is proposed to achieve non-zero secrecy rate.
Fifth and last, physical layer security in large-scale wireless sensor networks is introduced.
A stochastic geometry approach is adopted to model the positions of sensors, access
points, sinks, and eavesdroppers. Two scenarios are considered: i) the active sensors
transmit their sensing data to the access points, and ii) the active access points forward
the data to the sinks. Important insights are concluded
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