440 research outputs found
Cooperative Jamming for Secure Communications in MIMO Relay Networks
Secure communications can be impeded by eavesdroppers in conventional relay
systems. This paper proposes cooperative jamming strategies for two-hop relay
networks where the eavesdropper can wiretap the relay channels in both hops. In
these approaches, the normally inactive nodes in the relay network can be used
as cooperative jamming sources to confuse the eavesdropper. Linear precoding
schemes are investigated for two scenarios where single or multiple data
streams are transmitted via a decode-and-forward (DF) relay, under the
assumption that global channel state information (CSI) is available. For the
case of single data stream transmission, we derive closed-form jamming
beamformers and the corresponding optimal power allocation. Generalized
singular value decomposition (GSVD)-based secure relaying schemes are proposed
for the transmission of multiple data streams. The optimal power allocation is
found for the GSVD relaying scheme via geometric programming. Based on this
result, a GSVD-based cooperative jamming scheme is proposed that shows
significant improvement in terms of secrecy rate compared to the approach
without jamming. Furthermore, the case involving an eavesdropper with unknown
CSI is also investigated in this paper. Simulation results show that the
secrecy rate is dramatically increased when inactive nodes in the relay network
participate in cooperative jamming.Comment: 30 pages, 7 figures, to appear in IEEE Transactions on Signal
Processin
How to Understand LMMSE Transceiver Design for MIMO Systems From Quadratic Matrix Programming
In this paper, a unified linear minimum mean-square-error (LMMSE) transceiver
design framework is investigated, which is suitable for a wide range of
wireless systems. The unified design is based on an elegant and powerful
mathematical programming technology termed as quadratic matrix programming
(QMP). Based on QMP it can be observed that for different wireless systems,
there are certain common characteristics which can be exploited to design LMMSE
transceivers e.g., the quadratic forms. It is also discovered that evolving
from a point-to-point MIMO system to various advanced wireless systems such as
multi-cell coordinated systems, multi-user MIMO systems, MIMO cognitive radio
systems, amplify-and-forward MIMO relaying systems and so on, the quadratic
nature is always kept and the LMMSE transceiver designs can always be carried
out via iteratively solving a number of QMP problems. A comprehensive framework
on how to solve QMP problems is also given. The work presented in this paper is
likely to be the first shoot for the transceiver design for the future
ever-changing wireless systems.Comment: 31 pages, 4 figures, Accepted by IET Communication
Single-Symbol ML Decodable Distributed STBCs for Partially-Coherent Cooperative Networks
Space-time block codes (STBCs) that are single-symbol decodable (SSD) in a
co-located multiple antenna setting need not be SSD in a distributed
cooperative communication setting. A relay network with N relays and a single
source-destination pair is called a partially-coherent relay channel (PCRC) if
the destination has perfect channel state information (CSI) of all the channels
and the relays have only the phase information of the source-to-relay channels.
In this paper, first, a new set of necessary and sufficient conditions for a
STBC to be SSD for co-located multiple antenna communication is obtained. Then,
this is extended to a set of necessary and sufficient conditions for a
distributed STBC (DSTBC) to be SSD for a PCRC, by identifying the additional
conditions. Using this, several SSD DSTBCs for PCRC are identified among the
known classes of STBCs. It is proved that even if a SSD STBC for a co-located
MIMO channel does not satisfy the additional conditions for the code to be SSD
for a PCRC, single-symbol decoding of it in a PCRC gives full-diversity and
only coding gain is lost. It is shown that when a DSTBC is SSD for a PCRC, then
arbitrary coordinate interleaving of the in-phase and quadrature-phase
components of the variables does not disturb its SSD property for PCRC.
Finally, it is shown that the possibility of {\em channel phase compensation}
operation at the relay nodes using partial CSI at the relays increases the
possible rate of SSD DSTBCs from when the relays do not have CSI
to 1/2, which is independent of N
Training-Embedded, Single-Symbol ML-Decodable, Distributed STBCs for Relay Networks
Recently, a special class of complex designs called Training-Embedded Complex
Orthogonal Designs (TE-CODs) has been introduced to construct single-symbol
Maximum Likelihood (ML) decodable (SSD) distributed space-time block codes
(DSTBCs) for two-hop wireless relay networks using the amplify and forward
protocol. However, to implement DSTBCs from square TE-CODs, the overhead due to
the transmission of training symbols becomes prohibitively large as the number
of relays increase. In this paper, we propose TE-Coordinate Interleaved
Orthogonal Designs (TE-CIODs) to construct SSD DSTBCs. Exploiting the block
diagonal structure of TE-CIODs, we show that, the overhead due to the
transmission of training symbols to implement DSTBCs from TE-CIODs is smaller
than that for TE-CODs. We also show that DSTBCs from TE-CIODs offer higher rate
than those from TE-CODs for identical number of relays while maintaining the
SSD and full-diversity properties.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figure
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