395 research outputs found

    Integrated Data and Energy Communication Network: A Comprehensive Survey

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    OAPA In order to satisfy the power thirsty of communication devices in the imminent 5G era, wireless charging techniques have attracted much attention both from the academic and industrial communities. Although the inductive coupling and magnetic resonance based charging techniques are indeed capable of supplying energy in a wireless manner, they tend to restrict the freedom of movement. By contrast, RF signals are capable of supplying energy over distances, which are gradually inclining closer to our ultimate goal – charging anytime and anywhere. Furthermore, transmitters capable of emitting RF signals have been widely deployed, such as TV towers, cellular base stations and Wi-Fi access points. This communication infrastructure may indeed be employed also for wireless energy transfer (WET). Therefore, no extra investment in dedicated WET infrastructure is required. However, allowing RF signal based WET may impair the wireless information transfer (WIT) operating in the same spectrum. Hence, it is crucial to coordinate and balance WET and WIT for simultaneous wireless information and power transfer (SWIPT), which evolves to Integrated Data and Energy communication Networks (IDENs). To this end, a ubiquitous IDEN architecture is introduced by summarising its natural heterogeneity and by synthesising a diverse range of integrated WET and WIT scenarios. Then the inherent relationship between WET and WIT is revealed from an information theoretical perspective, which is followed by the critical appraisal of the hardware enabling techniques extracting energy from RF signals. Furthermore, the transceiver design, resource allocation and user scheduling as well as networking aspects are elaborated on. In a nutshell, this treatise can be used as a handbook for researchers and engineers, who are interested in enriching their knowledge base of IDENs and in putting this vision into practice

    Optimal Power Allocation for Energy Recycling Assisted Cooperative Communications

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    We investigate the problem of optimal power allocation for energy recycling cooperative communications systems, employing full duplex relays, based on the criterion of maximizing the rate, or equivalently the Signal to Noise Ratio (SNR), of the system. A system model is investigated where each time slot is split into an information transmission phase, during which the Source (S) transmits information to the destination (D) and a full-duplex Relay (R), and an energy harvesting phase. During the energy harvesting phase, R relays information to D, while concurrently it performs energy harvesting, exploiting a signal transmitted by S and energy recycling, exploiting its own transmission. For this system model, we formulate a rate/SNR maximization problem, in order to compute the optimal source power levels for both information transfer and energy transfer phases. The cost function of this optimization problem is then substituted by a sharp approximation, which allows for obtaining an analytically tractable power allocation. The performance of the resulting power allocation is then assessed by means of Monte Carlo simulations, and it is found that it outperforms existing solutions. It is therefore shown that our proposed solution can contribute towards increasing the range of IoT networks

    Evaluating the effect of self-interference on the performance of full-duplex two-way relaying communication with energy harvesting

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    In this paper, we study the throughput and outage probability (OP) of two-way relaying (TWR) communication system with energy harvesting (EH). The system model consists two source nodes and a relay node which operates in full-duplex (FD) mode. The effect of self-interference (SI) due to the FD operation on the system performance is evaluated for both one-way full duplex (OWFD) and two-way full duplex (TWFD) diagrams where the amplify-and-forward (AF) relay node collects energy harvesting with the time switching (TS) scheme. We first propose an individual OP expression for each specific source. Then, we derive the exact closed-form overall OP expression for the OWFD diagram. For the TWFD diagram, we propose an approximate closed-form expression for the overall OP. The overall OP comparison among hybrid systems (Two-Way Half-Duplex (TWHD), OWFD, TWFD) are also discussed.  Finally, the numerical/simulated results are presented for Rayleigh fading channels to demonstrate the correction of the proposed analysis

    Design of Network Coding Schemes and RF Energy Transfer in Wireless Communication Networks

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    This thesis focuses on the design of network coding schemes and radio frequency (RF) energy transfer in wireless communication networks. During the past few years, network coding has attracted significant attention because of its capability to transmit maximum possible information in a network from multiple sources to multiple destinations via a relay. Normally, the destinations are only able to decode the information with sufficient prior knowledge. To enable the destinations to decode the information in the cases with less/no prior knowledge, a pattern of nested codes with multiple interpretations using binary convolutional codes is constructed in a multi-source multi-destination wireless relay network. Then, I reconstruct nested codes with convolutional codes and lattice codes in multi-way relay channels to improve the spectrum efficiency. Moreover, to reduce the high decoding complexity caused by the adopted convolutional codes, a network coded non-binary low-density generator matrix (LDGM) code structure is proposed for a multi-access relay system. Another focus of this thesis is on the design of RF-enabled wireless energy transfer (WET) schemes. Much attention has been attracted by RF-enabled WET technology because of its capability enabling wireless devices to harvest energy from wireless signals for their intended applications. I first configure a power beacon (PB)-assisted wireless-powered communication network (PB-WPCN), which consists of a set of hybrid access point (AP)-source pairs and a PB. Both cooperative and non-cooperative scenarios are considered, based on whether the PB is cooperative with the APs or not. Besides, I develop a new distributed power control scheme for a power splitting-based interference channel (IFC) with simultaneous wireless information and power transfer (SWIPT), where the considered IFC consists of multiple source-destination pairs

    Virtual full-duplex multiple-input multiple-output relaying in the presence of inter-relay interference

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    Driven by the increasing demand for wireless broadband, low latency and power-efficient networks, multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) full-duplex relaying (FDR) schemes have gained much attention in recent years. However, the performance of FDR schemes is impaired by sophisticated self-interference suppression techniques. As such, MIMO virtual FDR (VFDR) schemes have been considered as practical alternatives to recover spectral efficiency loss in half-duplex relays (HDR) without the need for sophisticated self-interference suppression algorithms. Successive relaying (SR) scheme is one of the VFDR techniques which uses a pair of HD relays that alternate between reception and retransmission of the source information to the destination. The performance of the SR based VFDR scheme is affected by inter-relay interference (IRI) due to the concurrent transmission of the source and relay nodes. The interference in VFDR schemes is conventionally treated as a degrading factor on the information decoding receivers resulting in the design of several interference avoidance and cancellation techniques. On the contrary, this thesis developed several VFDR schemes which exploit the interference to achieve performance improvement. In this study, interference management techniques, transmit/receive beamforming matrices, power allocation and joint optimisation algorithms were developed. First, a reliable MIMO VFDR scheme in the presence of IRI was designed, where the IRI was exploited for reliability improvements. The results showed significant reliability improvement over the existing schemes. Second, a joint power allocation for MIMO VFDR schemes under network power constraint was developed. The power allocation problem in the presence of IRI was formulated based on primal-dual algorithm. The results showed that the joint optimisation algorithm can efficiently utilise the network power when compared with the conventional approach. Third, simultaneous wireless information and power transfer (SWIPT) in MIMO VFDR system was proposed, where the transmit beamforming matrices which optimise the achievable rate and harvested energy at the relays were jointly designed. The results showed that the interference energy can be harnessed to improve the SWIPT system throughput. Finally, a joint optimisation of the power split and relay position in SWIPT MIMO VFDR network were investigated. Results showed that the joint optimisation of the power split and distance factors can greatly improve the system outage performance. The analytical and numerical results in the research showed that IRI can be exploited to improve the throughput, reliability and energy harvesting of a wireless communication system. The results also showed a minimum achievable rate improvement of 80% over the HDR schemes and a reliability of 100% over the FDR schemes

    Reliability performance analysis of half-duplex and full-duplex schemes with self-energy recycling

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    Abstract. Radio frequency energy harvesting (EH) has emerged as a promising option for improving the energy efficiency of current and future networks. Self-energy recycling (sER), as a variant of EH, has also appeared as a suitable alternative that allows to reuse part of the transmitted energy via an energy loop. In this work we study the benefits of using sER in terms of reliability improvements and compare the performance of full-duplex (FD) and half-duplex (HD) schemes when using multi-antenna techniques at the base station side. We also assume a model for the hardware energy consumption, making the analysis more realistic since most works only consider the energy spent on transmission. In addition to spectral efficiency enhancements, results show that FD performs better than HD in terms of reliability. We maximize the outage probability of the worst link in the network using a dynamic FD scheme where a small base station (SBS) determines the optimal number of antennas for transmission and reception. This scheme proves to be more efficient than classical HD and FD modes. Results show that the use of sER at the SBS introduces changes on the distribution of antennas for maximum fairness when compared to the setup without sER. Moreover, we determine the minimum number of active radio frequency chains required at the SBS in order to achieve a given reliability target
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