161 research outputs found
Energy-Efficient Cooperative Cognitive Relaying Schemes for Cognitive Radio Networks
We investigate a cognitive radio network in which a primary user (PU) may
cooperate with a cognitive radio user (i.e., a secondary user (SU)) for
transmissions of its data packets. The PU is assumed to be a buffered node
operating in a time-slotted fashion where the time is partitioned into
equal-length slots. We develop two schemes which involve cooperation between
primary and secondary users. To satisfy certain quality of service (QoS)
requirements, users share time slot duration and channel frequency bandwidth.
Moreover, the SU may leverage the primary feedback message to further increase
both its data rate and satisfy the PU QoS requirements. The proposed
cooperative schemes are designed such that the SU data rate is maximized under
the constraint that the PU average queueing delay is maintained less than the
average queueing delay in case of non-cooperative PU. In addition, the proposed
schemes guarantee the stability of the PU queue and maintain the average energy
emitted by the SU below a certain value. The proposed schemes also provide more
robust and potentially continuous service for SUs compared to the conventional
practice in cognitive networks where SUs transmit in the spectrum holes and
silence sessions of the PUs. We include primary source burstiness, sensing
errors, and feedback decoding errors to the analysis of our proposed
cooperative schemes. The optimization problems are solved offline and require a
simple 2-dimensional grid-based search over the optimization variables.
Numerical results show the beneficial gains of the cooperative schemes in terms
of SU data rate and PU throughput, average PU queueing delay, and average PU
energy savings
Throughput of a Cognitive Radio Network under Congestion Constraints: A Network-Level Study
In this paper we analyze a cognitive radio network with one primary and one
secondary transmitter, in which the primary transmitter has bursty arrivals
while the secondary node is assumed to be saturated (i.e. always has a packet
waiting to be transmitted). The secondary node transmits in a cognitive way
such that it does not impede the performance of the primary node. We assume
that the receivers have multipacket reception (MPR) capabilities and that the
secondary node can take advantage of the MPR capability by transmitting
simultaneously with the primary under certain conditions. We obtain analytical
expressions for the stationary distribution of the primary node queue and we
also provide conditions for its stability. Finally, we provide expressions for
the aggregate throughput of the network as well as for the throughput at the
secondary node.Comment: Presented at CROWNCOM 201
On Orthogonal Band Allocation for Multi-User Multi-Band Cognitive Radio Networks: Stability Analysis
In this work, we study the problem of band allocation of buffered
secondary users (SUs) to primary bands licensed to (owned by)
buffered primary users (PUs). The bands are assigned to SUs in an orthogonal
(one-to-one) fashion such that neither band sharing nor multi-band allocations
are permitted. In order to study the stability region of the secondary network,
the optimization problem used to obtain the stability region's envelope
(closure) is established and is shown to be a linear program which can be
solved efficiently and reliably. We compare our orthogonal allocation system
with two typical low-complexity and intuitive band allocation systems. In one
system, each cognitive user chooses a band randomly in each time slot with some
assignment probability designed such that the system maintained stable, while
in the other system fixed (deterministic) band assignment is adopted throughout
the lifetime of the network. We derive the stability regions of these two
systems. We prove mathematically, as well as through numerical results, the
advantages of our proposed orthogonal system over the other two systems.Comment: Conditional Acceptance in IEEE Transactions on Communication
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