8 research outputs found

    Distributed feedback-aided subspace concurrent opportunistic communications

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    © 2019 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. Permission from IEEE must be obtained for all other uses, in any current or future media, including reprinting/republishing this material for advertising or promotional purposes,creating new collective works, for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or reuse of any copyrighted component of this work in other works.This paper deals with the distributed subspace agreement problem for opportunistic communications in time division duplex (TDD) distributed networks. Since scenario-adapted opportunistic transmission schemes rely on locally sampled observations from the wireless environment, degrees-of-freedom (DoF) sensed as available at any node may differ. Transmitting information without agreeing the common active subspace may incur in a performance loss due to noise enhancement, energy loss and inter-system interference. In this context, we propose two subspace concurrence schemes with and without side information about neighboring user's DoF.Peer ReviewedPostprint (published version

    Extending Wireless Powered Communication Networks for Future Internet of Things

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    Energy limitation has always been a major concern for long-term operation of wireless networks. With today's exponential growth of wireless technologies and the rapid movement towards the so-called Internet of Things (IoT), the need for a reliable energy supply is more tangible than ever. Recently, energy harvesting has gained considerable attention in research communities as a sustainable solution for prolonging the lifetime of wireless networks. Beside conventional energy harvesting sources such as solar, wind, vibration, etc. harvesting energy from radio frequency (RF) signals has drawn significant research interest in recent years as a promising way to overcome the energy bottleneck. Lately, the integration of RF energy transfer with wireless communication networks has led to the emergence of an interesting research area, namely, wireless powered communication network (WPCN), where network users are powered by a hybrid access point (HAP) which transfers wireless energy to the users in addition to serving the functionalities of a conventional access point. The primary aim of this thesis is to extend the baseline model of WPCN to a dual-hop WPCN (DH-WPCN) in which a number of energy-limited relays are in charge of assisting the information exchange between energy-stable users and the HAP. Unlike most of the existing research in this area which has merely focused on designing methods and protocols for uplink communication, we study both uplink and downlink information transmission in the DH-WPCN. We investigate sum-throughput maximization problems in both directions and propose algorithms for optimizing the values of the related parameters. We also tackle the doubly near-far problem which occurs due to unequal distance of the relays from the HAP by proposing a fairness enhancement algorithm which guarantees throughput fairness among all users

    Towards 6G-Enabled Internet of Things with IRS-Empowered Backscatter-Assisted WPCNs

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    Wireless powered communication networks (WPCNs) are expected to play a key role in the forthcoming 6G systems. However, they have not yet found their way to large-scale practical implementations due to their inherent shortcomings such as the low efficiency of energy transfer and information transmission. In this thesis, we aim to study the integration of WPCNs with other novel technologies of backscatter communication and intelligent reflecting surface (IRS) to enhance the performance and improve the efficiency of these networks so as to prepare them for being seamlessly fitted into the 6G ecosystem. We first study the incorporation of backscatter communication into conventional WPCNs and investigate the performance of backscatter-assisted WPCNs (BS-WPCNs). We then study the inclusion of IRS into the WPCN environment, where an IRS is used for improving the performance of energy transfer and information transmission in WPCNs. After that, the simultaneous integration of backscatter communication and IRS technologies into WPCNs is investigated, where the analyses show the significant performance gains that can be achieved by this integration

    Channel assembling and resource allocation in multichannel spectrum sharing wireless networks

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    Submitted in fulfilment of the academic requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) in Engineering, in the School of Electrical and Information Engineering, Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment, at the University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa, 2017The continuous evolution of wireless communications technologies has increasingly imposed a burden on the use of radio spectrum. Due to the proliferation of new wireless networks applications and services, the radio spectrum is getting saturated and becoming a limited resource. To a large extent, spectrum scarcity may be a result of deficient spectrum allocation and management policies, rather than of the physical shortage of radio frequencies. The conventional static spectrum allocation has been found to be ineffective, leading to overcrowding and inefficient use. Cognitive radio (CR) has therefore emerged as an enabling technology that facilitates dynamic spectrum access (DSA), with a great potential to address the issue of spectrum scarcity and inefficient use. However, provisioning of reliable and robust communication with seamless operation in cognitive radio networks (CRNs) is a challenging task. The underlying challenges include development of non-intrusive dynamic resource allocation (DRA) and optimization techniques. The main focus of this thesis is development of adaptive channel assembling (ChA) and DRA schemes, with the aim to maximize performance of secondary user (SU) nodes in CRNs, without degrading performance of primary user (PU) nodes in a primary network (PN). The key objectives are therefore four-fold. Firstly, to optimize ChA and DRA schemes in overlay CRNs. Secondly, to develop analytical models for quantifying performance of ChA schemes over fading channels in overlay CRNs. Thirdly, to extend the overlay ChA schemes into hybrid overlay and underlay architectures, subject to power control and interference mitigation; and finally, to extend the adaptive ChA and DRA schemes for multiuser multichannel access CRNs. Performance analysis and evaluation of the developed ChA and DRA is presented, mainly through extensive simulations and analytical models. Further, the cross validation has been performed between simulations and analytical results to confirm the accuracy and preciseness of the novel analytical models developed in this thesis. In general, the presented results demonstrate improved performance of SU nodes in terms of capacity, collision probability, outage probability and forced termination probability when employing the adaptive ChA and DRA in CRNs.CK201
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